| Literature DB >> 34093164 |
Yawen Yang1, Huijuan Pan2, Wenxiu Pan1, Yang Liu1, Xiaohui Song1, Chuanxin M Niu1, Wuwei Feng3, Jixian Wang1, Qing Xie1,2.
Abstract
Objectives: Either motor training or repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) could modulate the neural plasticity after stroke. Therefore, synchronizing the two interventions may optimize the efficiency of recovery. In the present study, we aim to investigate the effect of rTMS along with hand grip training on the neurobehavioral and hand functional recovery in one cohort of subacute stroke patients.Entities:
Keywords: hand function; neuro-modulation; rehabilitation; stroke; transcranial magnetic stimulation
Year: 2021 PMID: 34093164 PMCID: PMC8171119 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2021.636184
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Demographic and clinical characteristics.
| Group A | Group B | Group C | ||
| Gender—m/f | 10/2 | 10/4 | 8/5 | 0.481a |
| Age (years) | 64 ± 8 | 61 ± 10 | 64 ± 8 | 0.724b |
| Stroke Onset (days) | 64 ± 23 | 79 ± 43 | 75 ± 49 | 0.820b |
| Stroke—i/h | 10/2 | 11/3 | 10/3 | 0.919a |
| Lesion location | 0.176a | |||
| Cortex | 0 | 0 | 2 | |
| Subcortex | 9 | 13 | 10 | |
| Both | 3 | 1 | 1 | |
| FMA-UE | 47 ± 6 | 47 ± 8 | 47 ± 7 | 0.990c |
FIGURE 1Flowchart of the trial. Group A: high-frequency rTMS during hand grip training; Group B: high-frequency rTMS alone; Group C: hand grip training alone; rTMS: repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation. CONSORT flow diagram illustrates recruitments, group allocation, follow-up, and analysis.
Behavioral outcome scores at baseline and post-intervention (mean ± SD).
| Group A | Group B | Group C | ||||
| Pre | Post | Pre | Post | Pre | Post | |
| JTHFT (total) | 399 ± 256 | 259 ± 200** | 323 ± 254 | 270 ± 235** | 373 ± 238 | 344 ± 229** |
| JTHFT (without writing) | 307 ± 235 | 183 ± 179** | 256 ± 228 | 204 ± 216*** | 301 ± 215 | 271 ± 198*** |
| Motor coordination | 190 ± 103 | 123 ± 59** | 146 ± 106 | 126 ± 89* | 170 ± 100 | 155 ± 100* |
| Speed of movement | 150 ± 111 | 103 ± 111** | 132 ± 114 | 108 ± 117** | 144 ± 109 | 133 ± 99 |
| Grip force scaling | 58 ± 47 | 33 ± 37** | 45 ± 43 | 37 ± 40* | 58 ± 45 | 56 ± 47 |
| FMA-UE | 47 ± 6 | 57 ± 5*** | 47 ± 8 | 53 ± 8*** | 47 ± 7 | 51 ± 7*** |
| FMA-UE (hand) | 16 ± 4 | 21 ± 3** | 16 ± 5 | 19 ± 4** | 15 ± 3 | 17 ± 4*** |
| Grip strength (kg) | 10 ± 5 | 12 ± 5*** | 11 ± 8 | 12 ± 28 | 11 ± 8 | 13 ± 9 |
| mBI | 89 ± 8 | 96 ± 26** | 87 ± 213 | 93 ± 21** | 78 ± 17 | 84 ± 15* |
Behavioral changes among three groups (mean ± SD).
| Group A | Group B | Group C | |||||
| ΔJTHFT (Total) | −140 ± 153** | −53 ± 75 | −28 ± 23 | 0.006b | 0.056b | 0.006b | 1.000b |
| ΔJTHFT (without writing) | −124 ± 140* | −52 ± 65 | −29 ± 29 | 0.013b | 0.113b | 0.012b | 1.000b |
| ΔMotor coordination | −55 ± 49* | −35 ± 71 | −15 ± 20 | 0.029b | 0.085b | 0.041b | 1.000b |
| ΔSpeed of movement | −47 ± 62* | −24 ± 29 | −11 ± 22 | 0.035b | 0.852b | 0.031b | 0.348b |
| ΔGrip force scaling | −25 ± 36* | −8 ± 12 | −2 ± 6 | 0.035b | 0.469b | 0.029b | 0.647b |
| ΔFMA-UE | 10 ± 4**# | 6 ± 4 | 4 ± 2 | 0.002c | 0.035c | 0.001c | 0.095c |
| ΔFMA-UE (hand) | 5 ± 3** | 3 ± 2 | 2 ± 2 | 0.021c | 0.062c | 0.006c | 0.302c |
| ΔGrip strength (kg) | 2 ± 1 | 1 ± 2 | 2 ± 3 | 0.640c | 0.406c | 0.946c | 0.436c |
| ΔmBI | 7 ± 4 | 6 ± 8 | 6 ± 8 | 0.211b | >0.05b | >0.05b | >0.05b |
FIGURE 2Behavioral and neurophysiological changes among the three groups (mean ± SEM). rTMSR+Training: rTMS and hand grip training (Group A); rTMSR: rTMS alone (Group B); rTMSS+Training: hand grip training alone (Group C). rTMS: repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation. One-way ANOVA or nonparametric Kruskal–Wallis H test was used to compare the behavioral and neurophysiological changes among the three groups, and multiple comparisons with the whole pairwise comparation. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01.