Department of Rehabilitation Sciences, Neurorehabilitation Research Group (eNRGy), KU Leuven, Tervuursevest 101, 3001, Leuven, Belgium.
Department of Kinesiology, Movement Control and Neuroplasticity Research Group, KU Leuven, Tervuursevest 101, 3001, Leuven, Belgium.
J Neurol. 2023 Jul;270(7):3442-3450. doi: 10.1007/s00415-023-11669-3. Epub 2023 Mar 23.
Writing training has shown clinical benefits in Parkinson's disease (PD), albeit with limited retention and insufficient transfer effects. It is still unknown whether anodal transcranial direct current stimulation (atDCS) can boost consolidation in PD and how this interacts with medication. To investigate the effects of training + atDCS versus training + sham stimulation on consolidation of writing skills when ON and OFF medication. Second, to examine the intervention effects on cortical excitability. In this randomized sham-controlled double-blind study, patients underwent writing training (one session) with atDCS (N = 20) or sham (N = 19) over the primary motor cortex. Training was aimed at optimizing amplitude and assessed during online practice, pre- and post-training, after 24-h retention and after continued learning (second session) when ON and OFF medication (interspersed by 2 months). The primary outcome was writing amplitude at retention. Cortical excitability and inhibition were assessed pre- and post-training. Training + atDCS but not training + sham improved writing amplitudes at retention in the ON state (p = 0.017, g = 0.75). Transfer to other writing tasks was enhanced by atDCS in both medication states (g between 0.72 and 0.87). Also, training + atDCS improved continued learning. However, no online effects were found during practice and when writing with a dual task. A post-training increase in cortical inhibition was found in the training + atDCS group (p = 0.039) but not in the sham group, irrespective of medication. We showed that applying atDCS during writing training boosted most but not all consolidation outcomes in PD. We speculate that atDCS together with medication modulates motor learning consolidation via inhibitory processes ( https://osf.io/gk5q8/ , 2018-07-17).
写作训练已在帕金森病 (PD) 中显示出临床益处,但保留率有限,转移效果不足。目前尚不清楚经颅直流电刺激 (tDCS) 是否可以增强 PD 中的巩固作用,以及它如何与药物相互作用。本研究旨在调查在服用药物时,训练+阳极 tDCS 与训练+假刺激对书写技能巩固的影响。其次,研究干预对皮质兴奋性的影响。在这项随机假对照双盲研究中,患者接受了经颅直流电刺激 (tDCS)(N=20)或假刺激(N=19)在初级运动皮层上的书写训练(一次)。训练旨在优化振幅,并在在线练习、训练前、训练后、24 小时保留后以及继续学习(第二次)时进行评估,同时服用药物(ON 和 OFF)(间隔 2 个月)。主要结局为保留时的书写振幅。在训练前和训练后评估皮质兴奋性和抑制性。在 ON 状态下,训练+阳极 tDCS 而非训练+假刺激可提高保留时的书写振幅(p=0.017,g=0.75)。在两种药物状态下,tDCS 均增强了对其他书写任务的转移(g 值在 0.72 到 0.87 之间)。此外,训练+阳极 tDCS 提高了继续学习。然而,在练习和进行双任务书写时,未发现在线影响。在训练+阳极 tDCS 组中发现训练后皮质抑制增加(p=0.039),而在假刺激组中未发现,无论是否服用药物。我们表明,在书写训练期间应用阳极 tDCS 可增强 PD 中的大多数但非所有巩固结果。我们推测,阳极 tDCS 与药物一起通过抑制过程调节运动学习的巩固(https://osf.io/gk5q8/ ,2018-07-17)。