Center for Clinical Research, The University of Queensland Herston, QLD, Australia ; Department of Neurology, NeuroCure Clinical Research Center, Charité University Medicine Berlin, Germany.
Department of Neurology, NeuroCure Clinical Research Center, Charité University Medicine Berlin, Germany.
Front Aging Neurosci. 2014 Sep 23;6:253. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2014.00253. eCollection 2014.
Language facilitation by transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) in healthy individuals has generated hope that tDCS may also allow improving language impairment after stroke (aphasia). However, current stimulation protocols have yielded variable results and may require identification of residual language cortex using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), which complicates incorporation into clinical practice. Based on previous behavioral studies that demonstrated improved language processing by motor system pre-activation, the present study assessed whether tDCS administered to the primary motor cortex (M1) can enhance language functions. This proof-of-concept study employed a sham-tDCS controlled, cross-over, within-subject design and assessed the impact of unilateral excitatory (anodal) and bihemispheric (dual) tDCS in 18 healthy older adults during semantic word-retrieval and motor speech tasks. Simultaneous fMRI scrutinized the neural mechanisms underlying tDCS effects. Both active tDCS conditions significantly improved word-retrieval compared to sham-tDCS. The direct comparison of activity elicited by word-retrieval vs. motor-speech trials revealed bilateral frontal activity increases during both anodal- and dual-tDCS compared to sham-tDCS. This effect was driven by more pronounced deactivation of frontal regions during the motor-speech task, while activity during word-retrieval trials was unaffected by the stimulation. No effects were found in M1 and secondary motor regions. Our results show that tDCS administered to M1 can improve word-retrieval in healthy individuals, thereby providing a rationale to explore whether M1-tDCS may offer a novel approach to improve language functions in aphasia. Functional magnetic resonance imaging revealed neural facilitation specifically during motor speech trials, which may have reduced switching costs between the overlapping neural systems for lexical retrieval and speech processing, thereby resulting in improved performance.
经颅直流电刺激(tDCS)对健康个体的语言促进作用带来了希望,即 tDCS 或许也可以改善中风(失语症)后的语言障碍。然而,目前的刺激方案产生了不同的结果,并且可能需要使用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)来确定残留的语言皮质,这使得其更难纳入临床实践。基于之前的行为研究表明,通过运动系统的预先激活可以改善语言处理,本研究评估了将刺激施加到初级运动皮质(M1)是否可以增强语言功能。这项概念验证研究采用了假刺激 tDCS 对照、交叉、个体内设计,并在 18 名健康的老年个体中评估了单侧兴奋性(阳极)和双半球(双极) tDCS 在语义词汇检索和运动言语任务中的影响。同时进行的 fMRI 检查了 tDCS 效应的神经机制。与假刺激 tDCS 相比,两种活性 tDCS 条件均显著改善了词汇检索。对词汇检索与运动言语试验引起的活动进行直接比较,发现与假刺激 tDCS 相比,阳极和双极 tDCS 均引起双侧额区活动增加。这种效应是由运动言语任务中额区更明显的去激活驱动的,而词汇检索试验中的活动不受刺激的影响。在 M1 和次级运动区域未发现效果。我们的结果表明,将 tDCS 施加到 M1 可以改善健康个体的词汇检索,从而为探索 M1-tDCS 是否可以为改善失语症的语言功能提供一种新方法提供了依据。功能磁共振成像显示,在运动言语试验中出现了特定的神经促进作用,这可能降低了词汇检索和言语处理重叠神经系统之间的转换成本,从而提高了性能。