| Literature DB >> 32973672 |
Effie Chew1,2, Wei-Peng Teo3,4, Ning Tang1, Kai Keng Ang5, Yee Sien Ng6, Juan Helen Zhou7,8, Irvin Teh9, Kok Soon Phua5, Ling Zhao1, Cuntai Guan10.
Abstract
Introduction: Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) has been shown to modulate cortical plasticity, enhance motor learning and post-stroke upper extremity motor recovery. It has also been demonstrated to facilitate activation of brain-computer interface (BCI) in stroke patients. We had previously demonstrated that BCI-assisted motor imagery (MI-BCI) can improve upper extremity impairment in chronic stroke participants. This study was carried out to investigate the effects of priming with tDCS prior to MI-BCI training in chronic stroke patients with moderate to severe upper extremity paresis and to investigate the cortical activity changes associated with training.Entities:
Keywords: brain-computer interface; motor imagery; motor recovery; stroke; transcranial direct current stimulation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32973672 PMCID: PMC7481473 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2020.00948
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1CONSORT flow diagram. Forty-two participants were screened. Nineteen participants completed the intervention and follow-up evaluation and were included in the final analysis−10 in the real-tDCS group, nine in the sham-tDCS group.
Clinical-demographics characteristics.
| Real tDCS | M | 29 | 11 | R | Parietal | I | hypertension, hyperlipidaemia | 51 | + |
| M | 54 | 28 | L | CR, IC | I | hypertension, hyperlipidaemia, DM | 29 | + | |
| F | 38 | 29 | R | BG | H | DM, Turner's syndrome | 38 | - | |
| F | 60 | 51 | R | BG H. extending to temporal and CR | H | hypertension | 26 | + | |
| F | 48 | 49 | L | BG H. extending to frontal and CR | H | hypertension | 39 | - | |
| M | 59 | 13 | L | MCA territory subcortical | I | DM, hypertension, hyperlipidaemia, IHD | 31 | + | |
| M | 65 | 27 | L | CR | I | DM, hypertension, hyperlipidaemia | 41 | - | |
| F | 57 | 10 | L | BG, CR | H | none | 40 | - | |
| M | 47 | 9 | R | MCA territory subcortical | I | Atrial fibrillation | 30 | - | |
| M | 65 | 86 | R | CR, IC, BG | I | DM, hypertension, hyperlipidaemia | 28 | - | |
| Mean ± SD | 6M/4F | 52.2 ± 11.8 | 31.3 ± 24.5 | 5L/5R | - | 6I/4H | - | 35.3 ± 7.8 | 4+/6- |
| Sham tDCS | M | 51 | 44 | R | MCA territory subcortical | I | IHD, hyperlipidaemia, | 33 | + |
| M | 39 | 25 | L | Subcortical (intracranial large vessel disease) | I | Acute myeloid leukemia | 36 | - | |
| M | 59 | 52 | R | BG | H | Hypertension hyperlipidaemia | 41 | + | |
| F | 70 | 19 | R | MCA territory subcortical | I | Hyperlipidaemia, rheumatic heart disease | 23 | - | |
| M | 59 | 44 | R | MCA territory subcortical | I | DM, hypertension, hyperlipidaemia | 29 | - | |
| M | 58 | 29 | L | MCA territory subcortical | I | Hypertension, hyperlipidaemia | 28 | - | |
| M | 58 | 25 | R | BG | H | Hypertension, hyperlipidaemia | 20 | + | |
| M | 47 | 10 | L | Thalamus | I | Hypertension, hyperlipidaemia | 40 | - | |
| M | 67 | 52 | R | CR | I | - | 43 | + | |
| Mean ± SD | 8M/1F | 56.4 ± 9.6 | 33.3 ± 15.1 | 3L/6R | - | 7I/ 2H | - | 32.6 ± 8.1 | 4+/5- |
| Statistics | χ(1) = 2.04, | χ(1) = 0.69, | - | χ(1) = 0.54, | - | χ(1) = 0.84, |
No statistical differences in demographic data were found between the real-tDCS and the sham-tDCS group, including the initial UE function. Data was analyzed by the independent student t-test or Pearson's Chi-Square test. Data shows Mean ± SD or number of cases.
M, male; F, female; L, left; R, right; CR, corona radiata; IC, internal capsule; BG, basal ganglia; MCA, middle cerebral artery; I, ischemic stroke; H, haemorrhagic stroke; DM, Diabetes Mellitus; IHD, Ischemic Heart Disease; UE-FM, Upper extremity sub-scale of the Fugl-Meyer Assessment; +, MEP is recordable from the ipsilesional M1; -, MEP is not recordable from the ipsilesional M1.
Figure 2UE-FM score (A) and ΔUE-FM (B) in both groups. (A) Both groups improved significantly in UE-FM at POST2 after intervention (n = 10 for real-tDCS group, n = 9 for sham-tDCS group). Between group difference was not statistically significant. (B) ΔUE-FM (changes in UE-FM score compared to PRE) was significantly higher at POST2, compared to POST1 in the real-tDCS group, not in the sham group. Data shows mean ± SEM.
Figure 3UE-FM (A) and ΔUE-FM (B) in both groups in MEP- participants. (A) Significant improvement in UE-FM in the real-tDCS group (n = 6), but not the sham-tDCS group (n = 5). (B) No significant difference in ΔUE-FM was shown between groups, or over time. Data shows mean ± SEM.
Figure 4RMT in the ipsilesional M1 (A) and contralesional M1 (B). (A) Significant reduction in RMT in ipsilesional M1 in real-tDCS (n = 6) group at POST1 and POST2, compared to PRE, but not in sham-tDCS group (n = 5). The overall difference between groups was statistically significant. (B) No significant difference in RMT in contralesional side between two groups (n = 10 for real-tDCS group, n = 9 for sham-tDCS group), or over time. Data shows mean ± SEM.
Figure 5SICI (ISI 2ms) in contralesional M1 in both groups. The sham-tDCS group (n = 9) had significantly reduced SICI2ms at POST1 and POST2, compared PRE. No difference over time was observed in real-tDCS group (n = 10). Between-group difference was not significant.
Correlation between UE-FM and corticospinal excitability in the contralesional M1.
| Contralesional RMT | −0.315* | 0.019 | −0.174 | 0.309 |
| ΔRMT | −0.325 | 0.053 | −0.14 | 0.414 |
| SICI2ms | 0.127 | 0.36 | 0.022 | 0.902 |
| ΔSICI2ms | −0.420* | 0.012 | −0.057 | 0.744 |
| Contralesional RMT | −0.204 | 0.263 | −0.201 | 0.382 |
| ΔRMT | −0.369 | 0.099 | −0.463* | 0.034 |
| SICI2ms | 0.180 | 0.332 | −0.220 | 0.352 |
| ΔSICI2ms | −0.415 | 0.069 | −0.110 | 0.645 |
UE-FM score is negatively correlated with RMT and ΔSICI.