Vasant Dipesh H, Michou Emilia, Mistry Satish, Rothwell John C, Hamdy Shaheen
Gastrointestinal Centre, Institute of Inflammation and Repair, Manchester Academic Health Sciences Centre (MAHSC), University of Manchester, Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust, Salford, UK.
Sobell Department of Motor Neuroscience and Movement Disorders, Institute of Neurology, University College London, London, UK.
J Physiol. 2015 Nov 15;593(22):4963-77. doi: 10.1113/JP270817. Epub 2015 Sep 30.
Neurostimulation is a rapidly emerging approach to swallowing rehabilitation, but cerebellar stimulation has not been explored as a treatment. Such proposed therapies for post-stroke dysphagia have required confirmation of physiological effects and optimisation of parameters in healthy humans prior to translational progression into patient groups. There is strong evidence for a role of the cerebellum in swallowing physiology, but this relationship has been under-explored. Recently, single pulses of cerebellar magnetic stimulation have been shown to directly evoke responses from pharyngeal musculature and produce short-term enhancement of cortico-pharyngeal motor evoked potentials, suggesting the feasibility of a cerebellar approach to neurostimulation in the swallowing system. We therefore examined multiple parameters of repetitive cerebellar magnetic stimulation and have described the optimal settings to provoke longer-lasting changes in swallowing neurophysiology. Based on evidence from the post-stroke dysphagia neurostimulation literature, these changes may have a therapeutic potential for swallowing rehabilitation.
Brain neurostimulation has been shown to modulate cortical swallowing neurophysiology in post-stroke dysphagia with therapeutic effects which are critically dependent on the stimulation parameters. Cerebellar neurostimulation is, however, a novel, unexplored approach to modulation of swallowing pathways as a prelude to therapy for dysphagia. Here, we randomised healthy human subjects (n = 17) to receive one of five cerebellar repetitive TMS (rTMS) interventions (Sham, 1 Hz, 5 Hz, 10 Hz and 20 Hz) on separate visits to our laboratory. Additionally, a subset of subjects randomly received each of three different durations (50, 250, 500 pulses) of optimal frequency versus sham cerebellar rTMS. Prior to interventions subjects underwent MRI-guided single-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to co-localise pharyngeal and thenar representation in the cortex and cerebellum (midline and hemispheric) before acquisition of baseline motor evoked potential (MEP) recordings from each site as a measure of excitability. Post-interventional MEPs were recorded for an hour and compared to sham using repeated measures ANOVA. Only 10 Hz cerebellar rTMS increased cortico-pharyngeal MEP amplitudes (mean bilateral increase 52%, P = 0.007) with effects lasting 30 min post-intervention with an optimal train length of 250 pulses (P = 0.019). These optimised parameters of cerebellar rTMS can produce sustained increases in corticobulbar excitability and may have clinical translation in future studies of neurogenic dysphagia.
神经刺激是吞咽康复中一种迅速兴起的方法,但小脑刺激尚未作为一种治疗方法进行探索。这种针对中风后吞咽困难的拟议疗法,在转化应用于患者群体之前,需要在健康人体中确认其生理效应并优化参数。有强有力的证据表明小脑在吞咽生理中发挥作用,但这种关系尚未得到充分探索。最近,已证明单次小脑磁刺激脉冲可直接诱发咽部肌肉组织的反应,并使皮质 - 咽部运动诱发电位产生短期增强,这表明在吞咽系统中采用小脑方法进行神经刺激具有可行性。因此,我们研究了重复小脑磁刺激的多个参数,并描述了引发吞咽神经生理学更持久变化的最佳设置。根据中风后吞咽困难神经刺激文献中的证据,这些变化可能具有吞咽康复的治疗潜力。
脑神经刺激已被证明可调节中风后吞咽困难患者的皮质吞咽神经生理学,其治疗效果严重依赖于刺激参数。然而,小脑神经刺激作为吞咽困难治疗的前奏,是一种新颖的、尚未探索的调节吞咽通路的方法。在这里,我们将健康人类受试者(n = 17)随机分组,在不同时间到我们实验室接受五种小脑重复经颅磁刺激(rTMS)干预之一(假刺激、1Hz、5Hz、10Hz和20Hz)。此外,一部分受试者随机接受三种不同持续时间(50、250、500脉冲)的最佳频率小脑rTMS与假刺激。在干预前,受试者接受MRI引导的单脉冲经颅磁刺激(TMS),以在皮质和小脑(中线和半球)中共定位咽部和鱼际代表区,然后从每个部位获取基线运动诱发电位(MEP)记录作为兴奋性的指标。干预后记录MEP一小时,并使用重复测量方差分析与假刺激进行比较。只有10Hz的小脑rTMS增加了皮质 - 咽部MEP振幅(平均双侧增加52%,P = 0.007),干预后效果持续30分钟,最佳训练长度为250脉冲(P = 0.019)。这些优化的小脑rTMS参数可使皮质延髓兴奋性持续增加,并且在未来神经源性吞咽困难的研究中可能具有临床转化价值。