Papoutsi Marina, Magerkurth Joerg, Josephs Oliver, Pépés Sophia E, Ibitoye Temi, Reilmann Ralf, Hunt Nigel, Payne Edwin, Weiskopf Nikolaus, Langbehn Douglas, Rees Geraint, Tabrizi Sarah J
UCL Huntington's Disease Centre, Queen Square Institute of Neurology, University College London, London WC1B 5EH, UK.
Birkbeck-UCL Centre for Neuroimaging, University College London, London WC1H 0AP, UK.
Brain Commun. 2020 Apr 23;2(1):fcaa049. doi: 10.1093/braincomms/fcaa049. eCollection 2020.
Non-invasive methods, such as neurofeedback training, could support cognitive symptom management in Huntington's disease by targeting brain regions whose function is impaired. The aim of our single-blind, sham-controlled study was to collect rigorous evidence regarding the feasibility of neurofeedback training in Huntington's disease by examining two different methods, activity and connectivity real-time functional MRI neurofeedback training. Thirty-two Huntington's disease gene-carriers completed 16 runs of neurofeedback training, using an optimized real-time functional MRI protocol. Participants were randomized into four groups, two treatment groups, one receiving neurofeedback derived from the activity of the supplementary motor area, and another receiving neurofeedback based on the correlation of supplementary motor area and left striatum activity (connectivity neurofeedback training), and two sham control groups, matched to each of the treatment groups. We examined differences between the groups during neurofeedback training sessions and after training at follow-up sessions. Transfer of training was measured by measuring the participants' ability to upregulate neurofeedback training target levels without feedback (near transfer), as well as by examining change in objective, a priori defined, behavioural measures of cognitive and psychomotor function (far transfer) before and at 2 months after training. We found that the treatment group had significantly higher neurofeedback training target levels during the training sessions compared to the control group. However, we did not find robust evidence of better transfer in the treatment group compared to controls, or a difference between the two neurofeedback training methods. We also did not find evidence in support of a relationship between change in cognitive and psychomotor function and learning success. We conclude that although there is evidence that neurofeedback training can be used to guide participants to regulate the activity and connectivity of specific regions in the brain, evidence regarding transfer of learning and clinical benefit was not robust.
非侵入性方法,如神经反馈训练,可通过针对功能受损的脑区来辅助亨廷顿舞蹈病的认知症状管理。我们这项单盲、假对照研究的目的是,通过检验两种不同方法,即活动和连接实时功能磁共振成像神经反馈训练,来收集关于神经反馈训练在亨廷顿舞蹈病中可行性的严格证据。32名亨廷顿舞蹈病基因携带者使用优化的实时功能磁共振成像方案完成了16次神经反馈训练。参与者被随机分为四组,两个治疗组,一组接受来自辅助运动区活动的神经反馈,另一组接受基于辅助运动区与左纹状体活动相关性的神经反馈(连接神经反馈训练),以及两个假对照组,分别与每个治疗组匹配。我们在神经反馈训练期间以及训练后的随访期间检查了各组之间的差异。通过测量参与者在无反馈情况下上调神经反馈训练目标水平的能力(近迁移),以及通过检查训练前和训练后2个月时客观的、预先定义的认知和精神运动功能行为指标的变化(远迁移)来衡量训练的迁移效果。我们发现,与对照组相比,治疗组在训练期间的神经反馈训练目标水平显著更高。然而,我们没有发现与对照组相比治疗组有更好迁移效果的有力证据,也没有发现两种神经反馈训练方法之间存在差异。我们也没有找到支持认知和精神运动功能变化与学习成功之间存在关联的证据。我们得出结论,虽然有证据表明神经反馈训练可用于引导参与者调节大脑特定区域的活动和连接,但关于学习迁移和临床益处的证据并不充分。