拇指
神经科学
心理学
持续植物状态
会话(web分析)
脑刺激
脑电图
神经可塑性
功能磁共振成像
运动皮层
刺激
物理医学与康复
意识
最小意识状态
医学
计算机科学
万维网
解剖
作者
Davide Aloi,Roya Jalali,Sara Calzolari,Melanie Lafanechere,R. Chris Miall,Davinia Fernández‐Espejo
出处
期刊:NeuroImage
[Elsevier]
日期:2023-04-28
卷期号:274: 120145-120145
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2023.120145
摘要
Therapeutic options to restore responsiveness in patients with prolonged disorder of consciousness (PDOC) are limited. We have recently shown that a single session of tDCS over M1 delivered at rest can reduce thalamic self-inhibition during motor command following. Here, we build upon this by exploring whether pairing tDCS with a concurrent passive mobilisation protocol can further influence thalamo-M1 dynamics and whether these changes are enhanced after multiple stimulation sessions. Specifically, we used Dynamic Causal Modelling (DCM) of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data from 22 healthy participants to assess changes in effective connectivity within the motor network during active thumb movements after 1 or 5 sessions of tDCS paired with passive mobilisations of the thumb. We found that a single anodal tDCS session decreased self-inhibition in M1, with five sessions further enhancing this effect. In addition, anodal tDCS increased thalamo-M1 excitation as compared to cathodal stimulation, with the effects maintained after 5 sessions. Together, our results suggest that pairing anodal tDCS with passive mobilisation across multiple sessions may facilitate thalamo-cortical dynamics that are relevant for behavioural responsiveness in PDOC. More broadly, they offer a mechanistic window into the neural underpinnings of the cumulative effects of multi-session tDCS.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI