Van Doren Jessica, Heinrich Hartmut, Bezold Mareile, Reuter Nina, Kratz Oliver, Horndasch Stefanie, Berking Matthias, Ros Tomas, Gevensleben Holger, Moll Gunther H, Studer Petra
Department of Child and Adolescent Mental Health, University Hospital Erlangen, Schwabachanlage 6, 91054 Erlangen, Germany.
Department of Child and Adolescent Mental Health, University Hospital Erlangen, Schwabachanlage 6, 91054 Erlangen, Germany; kbo-Heckscher-Klinikum, Deisenhofener Straße 28, 81052 Munich, Germany.
Int J Psychophysiol. 2017 Feb;112:80-88. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2016.11.004. Epub 2016 Nov 6.
Neurofeedback (NF) is increasingly used as a therapy for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), however behavioral improvements require 20 plus training sessions. More economic evaluation strategies are needed to test methodological optimizations and mechanisms of action. In healthy adults, neuroplastic effects have been demonstrated directly after a single session of NF training. The aim of our study was to test the feasibility of short-term theta/beta NF in children with ADHD and to learn more about the mechanisms underlying this protocol. Children with ADHD conducted two theta/beta NF sessions. In the first half of the sessions, three NF trials (puzzles as feedback animations) were run with pre- and post-reading and picture search tasks. A significant decrease of the theta/beta ratio (TBR), driven by a decrease of theta activity, was found in the NF trials of the second session demonstrating rapid and successful neuroregulation by children with ADHD. For pre-post comparisons, children were split into good vs. poor regulator groups based on the slope of their TBR over the NF trials. For the reading task, significant EEG changes were seen for the theta band from pre- to post-NF depending on individual neuroregulation ability. This neuroplastic effect was not restricted to the feedback electrode Cz, but appeared as a generalized pattern, maximal over midline and right-hemisphere electrodes. Our findings indicate that short-term NF may be a valuable and economical tool to study the neuroplastic mechanisms of targeted NF protocols in clinical disorders, such as theta/beta training in children with ADHD.
神经反馈(NF)越来越多地被用作治疗注意力缺陷多动障碍(ADHD)的一种疗法,然而行为改善需要20多次训练课程。需要更多的经济评估策略来测试方法优化和作用机制。在健康成年人中,单次NF训练后已直接证明了神经可塑性效应。我们研究的目的是测试短期θ/β NF对ADHD儿童的可行性,并更多地了解该方案背后的机制。ADHD儿童进行了两次θ/β NF训练课程。在课程的前半部分,进行了三次NF试验(以拼图作为反馈动画),同时进行了阅读前和阅读后以及图片搜索任务。在第二阶段的NF试验中发现,由于θ活动的减少,θ/β比率(TBR)显著下降,这表明ADHD儿童能够快速且成功地进行神经调节。为了进行前后比较,根据儿童在NF试验中TBR的斜率将其分为调节良好组和调节不良组。对于阅读任务,根据个体神经调节能力,从NF前到NF后,θ波段的脑电图有显著变化。这种神经可塑性效应并不局限于反馈电极Cz,而是呈现出一种普遍的模式,在中线和右半球电极上最为明显。我们的研究结果表明,短期NF可能是一种有价值且经济的工具,用于研究临床疾病中靶向NF方案的神经可塑性机制,例如对ADHD儿童进行θ/β训练。