Richardson Jessica D, Galletta Elizabeth E, Charvet Leigh, Shaw Michael
Department of Speech and Hearing Sciences, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA.
Department of Speech Language Pathology, Rusk Rehabilitation Medicine, NYU Langone Health, New York, New York, USA.
Aphasiology. 2023;37(7):1039-1063. doi: 10.1080/02687038.2022.2076279. Epub 2022 May 23.
Remotely-supervised transcranial direct current stimulation (RS-tDCS) is a telerehabilitation protocol that provides access to tDCS treatment to participants with aphasia in their homes using real-time monitoring via videoconference and overcomes barriers associated with in-person tDCS treatment of neurological disease.
Two feasibility studies for participants with aphasia are presented herein that investigate (1) RS-tDCS procedural implementation, acceptability, and demand, and (2) acceptability of ten repeated consecutive RS-tDCS sessions.
METHODS & PROCEDURES: Thirteen participants with aphasia were enrolled in Study 1: (1) seven participants with stroke-induced latent aphasia, (2) four participants with stroke-induced clinically diagnosed aphasia, and (3) two participants with logopenic variant primary progressive aphasia (lvPPA). Four supervisors (1 certified speech-language pathologist [SLP], 3 graduate SLPs-in-training) were trained to supervise RS-tDCS and also provided survey responses. All participants participated in RS-tDCS training and a virtual simulation of home delivery. Two participants with stroke-induced aphasia (1 latent aphasia, 1 clinically diagnosed aphasia) were enrolled in 10 consecutive sessions of RS-tDCS alongside computerized treatment in their home for Study 2.
OUTCOMES & RESULTS: This work provides preliminary evidence for the feasibility of RS-tDCS for people with stable and progressive aphasia of varying severity and typology and includes both participant and clinician perspectives. Importantly, no major barriers to use of RS-tDCS were revealed for people with aphasia, though eHelpers were required for two participants.
This work confirms that remotely supervised at-home tDCS studies can be used to enable much-needed efficacy trials, with sufficient sample size, power, and dosing considerations, that will determine the clinical efficacy of tDCS as a treatment adjuvant to aphasia treatment.
远程监督经颅直流电刺激(RS-tDCS)是一种远程康复方案,通过视频会议实时监测,使失语症患者能够在家中接受tDCS治疗,克服了与神经系统疾病面对面tDCS治疗相关的障碍。
本文介绍了两项针对失语症患者的可行性研究,旨在调查(1)RS-tDCS程序的实施、可接受性和需求,以及(2)连续十次重复RS-tDCS治疗的可接受性。
13名失语症患者参与了研究1:(1)7名中风诱发潜在失语症患者,(2)4名中风诱发临床诊断失语症患者,以及(3)2名言语迟缓型原发性进行性失语(lvPPA)患者。4名监督员(1名认证言语语言病理学家[SLP],3名研究生SLP实习生)接受了监督RS-tDCS的培训,并提供了调查反馈。所有参与者都参加了RS-tDCS培训和家庭送药的虚拟模拟。两名中风诱发失语症患者(1名潜在失语症患者,1名临床诊断失语症患者)在研究2中在家中接受了连续10次RS-tDCS治疗,并同时接受计算机化治疗。
这项工作为RS-tDCS对不同严重程度和类型的稳定和进行性失语症患者的可行性提供了初步证据,并包括了参与者和临床医生的观点。重要的是,尽管两名参与者需要电子助手,但未发现失语症患者使用RS-tDCS存在重大障碍。
这项工作证实,远程监督的家庭tDCS研究可用于开展急需的疗效试验,同时考虑足够的样本量、效力和剂量,这将确定tDCS作为失语症治疗辅助手段的临床疗效。