| Literature DB >> 33192277 |
Marc Sebastián-Romagosa1, Woosang Cho2,3,4, Rupert Ortner1, Nensi Murovec2, Tim Von Oertzen5, Kyousuke Kamada6, Brendan Z Allison7, Christoph Guger1,2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Numerous recent publications have explored Brain Computer Interfaces (BCI) systems as rehabilitation tools to help subacute and chronic stroke patients recover upper extremity movement. Recent work has shown that BCI therapy can lead to better outcomes than conventional therapy. BCI combined with other techniques such as Functional Electrical Stimulation (FES) and Virtual Reality (VR) allows to the user restore the neurological function by inducing the neural plasticity through improved real-time detection of motor imagery (MI) as patients perform therapy tasks.Entities:
Keywords: BCI; Fugl-Meyer assessment; brain computer interfaces; functional electrical stimulation; neurorehabilitation; stroke; upper limb
Year: 2020 PMID: 33192277 PMCID: PMC7640937 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2020.591435
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
FIGURE 1Timing of assessments (Pre-assessments 1 and 2 are yellow; Post-assessments 1, 2, and 3 are orange) and BCI Training period (green) for each patient.
Participants’ baselines.
| Group | Age ( | Time since stroke [months] | Male | Female | Affected side (Left–Right) | |
| Cortical | 5 | 54.00 (27.1) | 59.4 (65.5) | 4 | 1 | 3–2 |
| Subcortical | 20 | 63.05 (17.0) | 59.7 (47.3) | 10 | 10 | 13–7 |
| Cortical + Subcortical | 12 | 57.58 (14.6) | 76.0 (83.4) | 6 | 6 | 9–3 |
| Unknown | 14 | 61.79 (14.2) | 61.5 (98.1) | 8 | 6 | 9–5 |
| All | 51 | 60.52 (16.7) | 64.04 (72.0) | 28 | 23 | 34–17 |
FIGURE 2This photograph shows components of the BCI system used in this study, including a monitor with an avatar to instruct the patient and provide visual feedback. The EEG system measures the brain activity, which is analyzed by the BCI in real-time. As soon as the BCI system detects left- or right- hand movement imagination, the avatar moves the left or right hand and the left or right FES activates to produce hand movement. Copyright: g.tec medical engineering GmbH, republished with permission.
FIGURE 3Trial description. The patient hears an attention sound at trial onset. At second 2, the system presents an arrow on the computer screen to instruct the patient to imagine left or right hand movement and a corresponding verbal instruction for left or right in the patient’s native language. During the feedback period, the FES and the virtual avatar are activated if the MI was classified correctly. At second 8, the patient hears a relax command.
Summary of the functional improvement after BCI treatment.
| Scale | PRE | Post | Δ | |||||
| Median [IQR] | Median [IQR] | Median [IQR] | Mean ( | No adj | Adj | |||
| BI | 51 | 90 [70–95] | 95 [67.5–100] | 0 [0–5] | 2.62 ( | 0.002 | 0.083 | |
| FTRS | Healthy | 50 | 0 [0–0.5] | 0 [0–0] | 0 [0–0] | −0.25 ( | 0.008 | 0.163 |
| Paretic | 50 | 12 [6–12] | 11 [4–12] | 0 [−1.5–0] | −1 ( | 0.003 | 0.090 | |
| MAS | Wrist | 51 | 2.5 [0.63–3.5] | 1 [0–3] | −0.5 [−1.44–0] | −0.72 ( | < 0.001 | <0.001 |
| Fingers | 51 | 2.5 [1–3.5] | 2 [1–3] | −0.5 [−1–0] | −0.63 ( | < 0.001 | <0.001 | |
| BBT | Healthy | 42 | 51.25 [43–64] | 59 [48–72] | 6.25 [1.5–9] | 6.29 ( | < 0.001 | <0.001 |
| Paretic | 43 | 0 [0–6] | 0 [0–5.75] | 0 [0–1.5] | 1.5 ( | 0.006 | 0.129 | |
| 9HPT | Healthy | 49 | 23 [19.79–28.5] | 22 [18.75–25] | −1.55 [−3.5—0.43] | −2.05 ( | < 0.001 | 0.010 |
| Paretic | 9 | 190 [154.13–364.59] | 170.32 [110.25–195.5] | −52 [−172.01—26.5] | −75.58 ( | 0.091 | 1.000 | |
| TPDT | H. Thumb | 41 | 3.5 [2.88–4] | 3 [2–4] | −0.5 [−1–0] | −0.59 ( | 0.003 | 0.090 |
| H. Index | 42 | 3.5 [3–4] | 3 [2–3] | −0.5 [−1–0] | −0.43 ( | 0.001 | 0.057 | |
| P. Thumb | 24 | 4.5 [4–5.5] | 3 [2–4] | −1 [−2—0.25] | −1.4 ( | 0.003 | 0.090 | |
| P. Index | 26 | 3.75 [3–5] | 3 [3–4] | 0 [−1–1] | −0.31 ( | 0.388 | 1.000 | |
| FMA-UE | 51 | 19 [9.63–33.88] | 22 [12–41.75] | 4 [1–8] | 4.68 ( | < 0.001 | <0.001 | |
| FMA-LE | 19 | 20 [12.63–24.38] | 20 [13–25.5] | 0 [−0.38–1] | 0.45 ( | 0.582 | 1.000 | |
| SRQ | Pain | 41 | 30.5 [19.75–37.13] | 23 [17.75–39.25] | 0 [−7.25–3.5] | −1.2 ( | 0.528 | 1.000 |
| Function | 41 | 4 [0–13.88] | 6 [0–20.25] | 0 [−0.38–4.13] | 1.57 ( | 0.449 | 1.000 | |
| Memory | 40 | 60.5 [45.75–70] | 65 [43.5–70] | 0 [−3–5.25] | 1.03 ( | 0.581 | 1.000 | |
| Mobility | 41 | 71 [38.38–80] | 77 [44.5–84] | 1 [−1.38–7] | 4.94 ( | 0.051 | 0.768 | |
| Recovery | 39 | 5 [4.13–6.38] | 7 [5–7] | 1 [0–2] | 0.87 ( | 0.003 | 0.090 | |
| MOCA | 10 | 27 [21.5–28] | 27.5 [26–29] | 2 [1–5] | 2.15 ( | 0.109 | 1.000 | |
| SCWT | Word | 10 | 73.75 [54–100.5] | 75.5 [64–108] | 4.25 [−2–10] | 3.95 ( | 0.106 | 1.000 |
| Color | 10 | 73 [59–94] | 71 [62–101] | 3.75 [1–8] | 4 ( | 0.053 | 0.768 | |
| Color-Word | 10 | 22.25 [10.5–34.5] | 31.5 [18–34] | 6.75 [2–8] | 5.75 ( | 0.002 | 0.083 | |
FIGURE 4Analysis of ΔFMA-UE. (*) marks significant changes. (A) Shows the FMA improvement before and after the therapy, and the functional changes at different times after the last therapy session. (B) Shows the relationship between the improvement in the FMA-UE scale and the accuracy threshold.
Analysis of long-term effects.
| Scale | ΔPost1-Post2 | ΔPost1-Post3 | |||||
| Median [IQR] | Adj | Median [IQR] | Adj | ||||
| BI | 46 | 0 [0–0] | 1.000 | 38 | 0 [0–0] | 1.000 | |
| FTRS | Healthy | 45 | 0 [0–0] | 1.000 | 37 | 0 [0–0] | 1.000 |
| Paretic | 45 | 0 [0–0] | 1.000 | 37 | 0 [−1–1] | 1.000 | |
| MAS | Wrist | 46 | 0 [0–0] | 1.000 | 38 | 0 [0–0] | 1.000 |
| Fingers | 46 | 0 [0–0] | 1.000 | 38 | 0 [−0.5–0] | 0.580 | |
| BBT | Healthy | 44 | 2 [−3–4.5] | 1.000 | 37 | 0 [−3–4] | 1.000 |
| Paretic | 44 | 0 [0–0] | 1.000 | 37 | 0 [0–0.25] | 1.000 | |
| 9HPT | Healthy | 45 | −1 [−2–0.52] | 0.119 | 37 | 0 [−2.25–1.21] | 1.000 |
| Paretic | 9 | −28 [−61.67–39.25] | 1.000 | 8 | 3.89 [−29.5–64.15] | 1.000 | |
| TPDT | H. Thumb | 41 | 0 [−0.25–0.25] | 1.000 | 36 | 0 [0–1] | 0.838 |
| H. Index | 42 | 0 [0–1] | 1.000 | 35 | 0 [−0.75—-1] | 1.000 | |
| P. Thumb | 23 | 0 [−1–0] | 1.000 | 17 | 0 [−0.25–2] | 1.000 | |
| P. Index | 21 | 0 [−0.25–0] | 1.000 | 20 | 1 [0–2] | 0.838 | |
| FMA-UE | 46 | 0 [−2–2] | 1.000 | 38 | 1 [−3–2] | 1.000 | |
| FMA-LE | 19 | 0 [0–0] | 1.000 | 14 | 1.5 [0–3] | 0.319 | |
| SRQ | Pain | 41 | 0 [−4–3] | 1.000 | 35 | 0 [−4.75–1.75] | 1.000 |
| Function | 41 | 0 [0–2.25] | 1.000 | 35 | 0 [−2–1.75] | 1.000 | |
| Memory | 41 | 0 [−0.25–3] | 1.000 | 35 | 0 [0–10] | 0.768 | |
| Mobility | 41 | 0 [0–3.75] | 0.768 | 35 | 2 [0–6] | 0.064 | |
| Recovery | 41 | 0 [−1–0] | 1.000 | 35 | 0 [−1–0] | 1.000 | |
| MOCA | 13 | 0 [−1–1] | 1.000 | 12 | 1 [0–2] | 0.163 | |
| SCWT | Word | 13 | 2 [−0.25–9.5] | 1.000 | 12 | 2.5 [−1.5–9] | 1.000 |
| Color | 13 | −4 [−11.5–5.25] | 1.000 | 12 | 7.5 [−4.5–15.5] | 1.000 | |
| Color-Word | 13 | 0 [−2.5–3.75] | 1.000 | 12 | 3.5 [−1–6.5] | 0.768 | |
FIGURE 5ΔUE-FM score according to impairment level represented by boxplots (box: 25–75 percentile, whiskers: 5–95 percentiles). Single data are shown, scattered along the y-axis for a better visualization. (A) Comparison of delta FMA-UE score in severe group. (B) Comparison of delta FMA-UE score in moderate group. (C) Comparison of delta FMA-UE score in mild group.
FIGURE 6Combined normalized improvement [%] of each patient. The improvement (differences between Pre and Post1) of each scale was normalized and summed up for the therapy effect in total. All the patients had positive outcomes in this total scale except patients #19 and #48.