Bradnam Lynley V, Graetz Lynton J, McDonnell Michelle N, Ridding Michael C
Discipline of Physiotherapy, Graduate School of Health, University of Technology Sydney, NSW, Australia ; Discipline of Physiotherapy, School of Health Sciences, Flinders University Adelaide, SA, Australia.
Discipline of Physiotherapy, School of Health Sciences, Flinders University Adelaide, SA, Australia.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2015 May 18;9:286. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2015.00286. eCollection 2015.
There is increasing evidence that the cerebellum has a role in the pathophysiology of primary focal hand dystonia and might provide an intervention target for non-invasive brain stimulation to improve function of the affected hand. The primary objective of this study was to determine if cerebellar transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) improves handwriting and cyclic drawing kinematics in people with hand dystonia, by reducing cerebellar-brain inhibition (CBI) evoked by transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). Eight people with dystonia (5 writer's dystonia, 3 musician's dystonia) and eight age-matched controls completed the study and underwent cerebellar anodal, cathodal and sham tDCS in separate sessions. Dystonia severity was assessed using the Writer's Cramp Rating Scale (WRCS) and the Arm Dystonia Disability Scale (ADDS). The kinematic measures that differentiated the groups were; mean stroke frequency during handwriting and fast cyclic drawing and average pen pressure during light cyclic drawing. TMS measures of cortical excitability were no different between people with FHD and controls. There was a moderate, negative relationship between TMS-evoked CBI at baseline and the WRCS in dystonia. Anodal cerebellar tDCS reduced handwriting mean stroke frequency and average pen pressure, and increased speed and reduced pen pressure during fast cyclic drawing. Kinematic measures were not associated with a decrease in CBI within an individual. In conclusion, cerebellar anodal tDCS appeared to improve kinematics of handwriting and circle drawing tasks; but the underlying neurophysiological mechanism remains uncertain. A study in a larger homogeneous population is needed to further investigate the possible therapeutic benefit of cerebellar tDCS in dystonia.
越来越多的证据表明,小脑在原发性局灶性手部肌张力障碍的病理生理学中发挥作用,并且可能为非侵入性脑刺激提供一个干预靶点,以改善患手的功能。本研究的主要目的是确定小脑经颅直流电刺激(tDCS)是否能通过减少经颅磁刺激(TMS)诱发的小脑-脑抑制(CBI)来改善手部肌张力障碍患者的书写和循环绘图运动学。8名肌张力障碍患者(5名书写痉挛患者,3名音乐家肌张力障碍患者)和8名年龄匹配的对照者完成了本研究,并在不同的时间段接受了小脑阳极、阴极和假tDCS。使用书写痉挛评定量表(WRCS)和手臂肌张力障碍残疾量表(ADDS)评估肌张力障碍的严重程度。区分两组的运动学指标包括:书写和快速循环绘图期间的平均笔画频率,以及轻循环绘图期间的平均笔压。FHD患者和对照者之间的皮质兴奋性TMS测量结果没有差异。在肌张力障碍患者中,基线时TMS诱发的CBI与WRCS之间存在中度负相关。阳极小脑tDCS降低了书写平均笔画频率和平均笔压,并提高了快速循环绘图期间的速度并降低了笔压。个体内的运动学指标与CBI的降低无关。总之,阳极小脑tDCS似乎改善了书写和画圈任务的运动学;但其潜在的神经生理机制仍不确定。需要在更大的同质人群中进行研究,以进一步探讨小脑tDCS在肌张力障碍中可能的治疗益处。