Department of Neurology, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Department of Otolaryngology, Head & Neck Surgery, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Sleep. 2022 Mar 14;45(3). doi: 10.1093/sleep/zsab275.
To determine whether sleep at baseline (before therapy) predicted improvements in language following either language therapy alone or coupled with transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) in individuals with primary progressive aphasia (PPA).
Twenty-three participants with PPA (mean age 68.13 ± 6.21) received written naming/spelling therapy coupled with either anodal tDCS over the left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) or sham condition in a crossover, sham-controlled, double-blind design (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02606422). The outcome measure was percent of letters spelled correctly for trained and untrained words retrieved in a naming/spelling task. Given its particular importance as a sleep parameter in older adults, we calculated sleep efficiency (total sleep time/time in bed x100) based on subjective responses on the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI). We grouped individuals based on a median split: high versus low sleep efficiency.
Participants with high sleep efficiency benefited more from written naming/spelling therapy than participants with low sleep efficiency in learning therapy materials (trained words). There was no effect of sleep efficiency in generalization of therapy materials to untrained words. Among participants with high sleep efficiency, those who received tDCS benefitted more from therapy than those who received sham condition. There was no additional benefit from tDCS in participants with low sleep efficiency.
Sleep efficiency modified the effects of language therapy and tDCS on language in participants with PPA. These results suggest sleep is a determinant of neuromodulation effects.Clinical Trial: tDCS Intervention in Primary Progressive Aphasia https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02606422.
确定基线(治疗前)的睡眠是否能预测原发性进行性失语症(PPA)患者在接受语言治疗或语言治疗联合经颅直流电刺激(tDCS)后语言改善的情况。
23 名 PPA 患者(平均年龄 68.13±6.21 岁)接受书面命名/拼写治疗,联合左侧额下回(IFG)的阳极 tDCS 或假刺激条件,采用交叉、 sham 对照、双盲设计(ClinicalTrials.gov 标识符:NCT02606422)。结果测量为命名/拼写任务中习得和未习得单词的正确拼写字母百分比。鉴于其作为老年人睡眠参数的特殊重要性,我们根据匹兹堡睡眠质量指数(PSQI)的主观反应计算了睡眠效率(总睡眠时间/卧床时间×100)。我们根据中位数分割将个体分为:高睡眠效率组和低睡眠效率组。
高睡眠效率组在学习治疗材料(习得单词)方面比低睡眠效率组从书面命名/拼写治疗中获益更多。睡眠效率对治疗材料向未习得单词的泛化没有影响。在高睡眠效率的参与者中,接受 tDCS 的患者比接受假刺激的患者从治疗中获益更多。在低睡眠效率的参与者中,tDCS 没有额外的获益。
睡眠效率改变了 PPA 患者语言治疗和 tDCS 对语言的影响。这些结果表明睡眠是神经调节效应的决定因素。临床试验:原发性进行性失语症中的 tDCS 干预https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02606422。