Review Article Noninvasive Brain Stimulation for Treatment of Post-Stroke Dysphagia

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Review Article Noninvasive Brain Stimulation for Treatment of Post-Stroke Dysphagia"

Transcription

1 Ashdin Publishing Neuroenterology Vol. 2 (2013), Article ID , 9 pages doi: /ne/ ASHDIN publishing Review Article Noninvasive Brain Stimulation for Treatment of Post-Stroke Dysphagia Eman M. Khedr and Noha Abo-Elfetoh Department of Neuropsychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, Assiut University, Assiut 71516, Egypt Address correspondence to Eman M. Khedr, emankhedr99@yahoo.com Received 22 November 2012; Revised 15 March 2013; Accepted 27 May 2013 Copyright 2013 Eman M. Khedr and Noha Abo-Elfetoh. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Abstract Considerable effort in recent years has been devoted to investigating neurophysiological changes in the brain after stroke and in developing novel strategies to enhance recovery particularly in the limbs and trunk. In contrast, although dysphagia is a severe complication and can be life threatening in a considerable number of stroke patients, it has not yet received the attention devoted to limb control. In this review, we discuss how introduction of (a) transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to test noninvasively the integrity of the cortico-bulbar swallowing system and (b) the plasticity provoking protocols of rtms and transcranial direct current stimulation have recently stimulated research into dysphagia after stroke and led to new potential avenues for treatment. We discuss the neural control of swallowing and discuss the contributions of TMS to understand how different brain areas are involved in dysphagia. We also consider recent studies using noninvasive brain stimulation to interact with synaptic plasticity in cortex and enhance recovery of dysphagia following stroke. Although further studies are needed, these investigations provide an important starting point to understand the stimulation parameters and patient characteristics that may influence the optimal response to therapeutic noninvasive brain stimulation. These techniques need to be refined further through a multicenter study so that they can become an essential tool that can be used in academic centers of excellence as well as in a general hospital setting. Keywords post-stroke dysphagia; rtms; tdcs; natural recovery of post-stroke dysphagia; fmri; magnetoencephalography 1. Introduction: neurological control and mechanism of swallowing Swallowing is a highly coordinated process and has been described as the most complex reflex that can be evoked by peripheral stimulation [11]. Much of this is coordinated in the swallowing center of the brainstem which has afferent inputs from peripheral receptors, the cortex, and the respiratory center. Nevertheless, post-stroke dysphagia can occur after either a brainstem or hemispheric stroke [55], suggesting that the representation of swallowing in the cortex is also of some importance in the swallowing process Sensory initiation of swallowing Sensory input is essential for several aspects of swallowing. In the decerebrate cat, stroking the soft palate, innervated by the trigeminal nerve, will evoke a rhythmic movement of the tongue similar to the oral phase of swallowing [48]. Sensory input from regions of the oropharynx and hypo-pharynx, innervated by the glossopharyngeal (IXth) and internal branch of the superior laryngeal nerve (isln), evokes the pharyngeal phase of swallowing which is followed by the esophageal phase. Pharyngeal swallowing can be initiated by electrical stimulation of the fibers in either nerve (in mammals) when the pattern of stimulation is within a particular frequency range [11, 45]. The need for optimum frequencies of stimulation suggests that multiple afferents must be activated and with particular patterns to trigger the pharyngeal swallow Brainstem The swallowing center is located at the medullary level and consists of a collection of interneurons within the reticular formation [10,25,45] between the posterior pole of the facial nucleus and the rostral pole of the inferior olive [3, 45]. It has relays to and from two regions in the pons, one ventral (part of the afferent system, stimulation of which results in swallowing and mastication) and the other dorsal to the motor trigeminal nucleus (relays sensory information to the ventroposteromedial nucleus in the thalamus) [4] Cortex Swallowing is predominantly a reflex that depends on the swallowing centers of the brainstem; however, the cortex has a role in initiating the reflex on a bolus to bolus basis and is essential for learning motor responses to different bolus characteristics [46, 47]. It seems to initiate activity in brainstem swallowing centers that starts the sequence of muscular contractions in the pharynx and oesophagus which is competed by peristalsis [42]. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) has been used to study the cortical input to swallowing control [1,19,34] and has revealed the presence of a short latency and bilateral projection to the muscles of the upper oesophagus. Khedr et al. [34] found the best site for stimulation to be about 3 cm anterior and 6 cm lateral to

2 2 Neuroenterology the vertex, with the site in the right hemisphere marginally anterior to that on the left. This may relate to interhemispheric differences in brain morphology. However, the center of the most effective site for stimulation is very similar to that seen during neurosurgery, being slightly anterior to the best points for obtaining responses in muscles of the hand or arm [43,59]. Hamdy et al. [17,19,21,22,23] reported that although the cortical output to pharyngeal muscles is bilateral, there was a tendency for individuals to have an asymmetry in the strength of the output from each hemisphere. They speculated that this may play a role in determining the severity of dysphagic symptoms after a hemispheric lesion: dysphagia might only occur when there is a lesion of the hemisphere with the largest representation [17]. However, Khedr et al. [34] found that the projections of both hemispheres to the esophageal muscles were of similar magnitude and latency despite asymmetric hemispheric representation. Why this should be is unclear. One possibility is that it represents a sampling bias since there were some individuals in each study who were asymmetric while others were symmetric. 2. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fmri) and magnetoencephalography and swallowing fmri studies have found BOLD activation in several distinct cortical loci including the lateral precentral gyrus, the lateral postcentral gyrus, and the right insula during either a naive saliva swallow, a voluntary saliva swallow, or a water bolus swallow [41]. In addition, the inferior frontal gyrus, the cingulate cortex, and the insula may also show activity [60]. Martin et al. [41] found that the anterior cingulate cortex was active almost exclusively during a naive saliva swallow, while the caudal and intermediate cingulate were associated with the voluntary saliva and water bolus swallowing [41]. They suggested that the caudal cingulate was involved with premotor and/or attentional processing that was required during voluntary swallowing. Hamdy et al. felt that the caudal cingulate cortex integrates sensory information during swallowing effectively serving as an association cortex [20]. Watanabe et al. s magnetocephalography study indicated that the anterior and posterior cingulate cortices were active bilaterally and well before the swallow of a 3-mL bolus of water on command, suggesting that the cingulate cortex may function in the cognitive process of deciding whether the food is ready to be swallowed [60]. These same investigators showed that the anterior insula and particularly the left insula and inferior frontal gyrus were active before swallowing, and they suggested that they might be essential to initiate a swallow. This would be consistent with the fact that lesions restricted to the anterior insula induce dysphagia with delay in evoking pharyngeal swallowing [9]. Most investigators believe that the sensorimotor representation for activity during pharyngeal swallowing is lateralized and asymmetric [20, 24, 49]. Dziewas et al. [12] who used magnetoencephalography to monitor activity during swallow suggested that in most individuals, the left primary sensorimotor cortex was most active during voluntary water swallowing. 3. Dysphagia in stroke patients Dysphagia or difficulty in swallowing is a frequent consequence of stroke, estimated to occur in up to 76% of patients with acute stroke [32] Hemispheric lesions It is now accepted that, on the basis of clinical and radiographic studies, unilateral hemisphere strokes can result in dysphagia [2, 15, 53]. Few studies have been conducted looking at precise cortical or hemispheric regions involved in producing dysphagia; the majority have investigated the role of the cortex/brain in general terms, investigating laterality or the lack of a precise center within the supratentorial structures. The majority of cortical lesions that result in dysphagia affect the precentral gyrus [7, 8]. Lesions here impair voluntary movement of pharyngeal and laryngeal support musculature on the contralateral side, with spasticity and peristaltic dyscoordination, which may, in turn, lead to aspiration Brainstem lesions Acute focal brainstem infarct may produce dysphagia with little or no other neurological deficit [31] or in combination with other signs as in the lateral medullary syndrome. Horner et al. [26] found that of the 62.5% of brainstem stroke patients aspirated, most of whom had lesions involving the medulla or pons [55]. 4. Natural recovery of post-stroke dysphagia In many cases, the ability to swallow improves spontaneously and rapidly, but in a percentage, swallowing remains a clinical problem for some time and in a few it is persistently poor for months or years [52]. If swallowing has not improved by days, it will take a mean of 69 days to improve [28]. Most patients eventually return to their pre-stroke diet, despite any ongoing abnormalities in the swallow, within 6 months of their stroke [40,56]. Other studies have documented improvements up to 3 4 years after stroke onset [28,29]. This slow recovery of function is thought to be caused by structural changes in the peri-infarct zones around the lesion [6]. In addition, there are areas of hypometabolism at sites not directly affected by the stroke [37]. This reduction in metabolism, in areas with no visible changes on CT,

3 Neuroenterology 3 may explain the presentation and subsequent recovery as the metabolic state returns to baseline. Hamdy s work [18], confirmed by Khedr and Abo-Elfetoh [36], has even suggested that recovery of dysphagia following stroke is due to an improvement in control of swallowing from the pharyngeal representation of the unaffected hemisphere. Unlike hand function, which seems to require restoration of output from the stroke hemisphere for effective functional recovery, bilaterally represented functions such as swallowing might recover by improving output from the non-stroke side. This reorganization of swallowing areas and the improvement of dysphagia is often independent of recovery from associated hemiparesis [18], and is not associated with any functional change within the brainstem. Indeed, cortical recovery appears to precede any functional change in swallowing. Khedr et al. [35] confirm that both the severity of stroke and neuroplasticity of the unaffected hemisphere have implications in the development of dysphagia. Can the recovery of swallowing be enhanced? A small number of studies have examined interventions in both the acute phase and chronic phase. Fraser et al. [13] studied the effect of a single session of electrical stimulation of the pharynx on swallowing and on corticobulbar excitability in a group of patients with dysphagic stroke. They found that 10 min of pharyngeal stimulation at 5 Hz produced long-lasting changes in swallowing function that correlated with increased corticobulbar excitability as assessed using single-pulse TMS. They speculated that sensory stimulation might be a useful therapeutic approach to treat dysphagia. Recently, they have explored the idea that rtms of the swallowing motor cortex might also be used to treat dysphagia [16]. In a group of healthy subjects, they showed that 100 pulses of rtms at 5 Hz and 80% motor threshold increased the excitability of corticobulbar projection from both hemispheres for up to 90 min. However, they did not test the effects in dysphagic patients after stroke. In another study, Jefferson et al. [30] examined if rtms could reverse the disruption of swallowing functions following a unilateral virtual lesion in the pharyngeal motor cortex in healthy individuals, as a direct test of the idea that rtms might be developed as a therapy after stroke. Twentythree healthy subjects were given varying amounts of 5-Hz rtms over the pharyngeal motor cortex to determine the most effective excitatory parameters. Thereafter, a unilateral virtual lesion was made in the pharyngeal motor cortex using 1-Hz rtms, followed by contralateral active or sham 5-Hz rtms. Motor-evoked potentials and serial swallowing reaction times were recorded before and for 60 min post lesion to assess reversibility of the disruption to swallowing. They found that the greatest increase in pharyngeal motor cortex excitability occurred after 250 pulses of 5-Hz rtms (P =.008), an effect that lasted over 2 hours. In contrast to sham rtms, active contralateral 5-Hz rtms completely abolished the cortical suppression induced by the virtual lesion, with effects lasting for up to 50 min in both unlesioned (P =.03) and lesioned (P =.001) hemispheres. Active rtms also reversed the changes in swallowing behavior (P =.018), restoring function to prelesional levels. They concluded that contralesionaltargeted neurostimulation modulates brain activity and swallowing motor behavior after experimental disruption and might be usefully applied in stroke-affected patients as a therapy for dysphagia [30]. 5. Effect of transcranial stimulation on post-stroke dysphagia (Table 1): 3 Hz rtms applied to patients in subacute stage of stroke dysphagia Khedr et al. [33,35] studied dysphagic patients in the subacute stage up to 2 weeks after stroke reasoning that early intervention might maximize the potential benefits. In addition, dysphagia is often most common in the early weeks after stroke, making this the period of greatest clinical need. In their first study [35], they recruited 26 patients with subacute hemispheric stroke and dysphagia in a double randomized trial. Real rtms was applied for 10 min every day for five consecutive days. A session of stimulation consisted of 10 trains of 3-Hz stimulation, each lasting for 10 s and then repeated every minute given through a figure-of-eight coil (9 cm diameter loop) positioned over esophageal cortical area of the affected hemisphere. The intensity of stimulation was set at 120% of the resting motor threshold for the FDI of unaffected hemisphere. Patients were followed up after the fifth session, and 30 and 60 days after the last session. Five days of rtms produced substantially greater improvement in dysphagia in the real compared with the sham group and this was maintained over 2 months of follow-up (P <.001). In addition, the electrophysiological measures on 10 patients who received real rtms indicated that the recovery was associated with an increase in the excitability of the corticobulbar projections from both hemispheres (Figure 1). Indeed, almost all patients recovered swallowing almost completely immediately after five sessions of rtms, while several of the patients in the sham group still had overt dysphagia. Some of the excellent responses may relate to the fact that the rtms produced an increase in the excitability of the corticobulbar projection from both hemispheres. Nevertheless, it is interesting to speculate that perhaps during natural recovery, the increased excitability of the non-stroke hemisphere might have suppressed function in the stroke hemisphere, as has been proposed for hand and arm function. If so, then the decision to apply rtms to the stroke hemisphere may not only have encouraged recovery of the affected side but also counteracted any suppressive effect from the non-stroke hemisphere.

4 4 Neuroenterology Name of author/year Verin and Leroi 2009 [58] Khedr et al [35] Khedr and Abo-Elfetoh 2010 [33] Michou et al [44] Kumar et al [38] Yang et al [61] Table 1: Clinical trials of rtms/tdcs for treatment of post-stroke dysphagia. Onset of stroke Type of trial Number of patients Frequency of rtms/tdcs application More than 6 month Subacute ischemic stroke 2 weeks after the stroke Subacute ischemic stroke Within one to three months Chronic dysphagia from stroke (mean of weeks post stroke) hours after their first ischemic stroke 25.9 ± 10.2 days after stroke Noncontrolled pilot study Double blind randomized trial real (n = 14) or sham (n = 12) rtms Double blind randomized trial real (n = 6) or sham (n = 5) rtms Uncontrolled trial Randomized control trial anodal versus sham stimulation Randomized control trial anodal versus sham 7 patients with hemispheric or subhemispheric ischemic stroke Twenty-six patients with post-stroke dysphagia 11 patients with lateral medullar syndrome 6 patients with severe, chronic dysphagia from stroke (mean of 38.8 ± 24.4 weeks post stroke) 14 patients with subacute unilateral hemispheric infarction Sixteen patients with post-stroke dysphagia 1-Hz rtms, 20% above the threshold value, 20 min per day every day for 5 days 3 Hz, 300 rtms pulses at an intensity of 120% hand motor threshold for 5 consecutive days 3 Hz, 300 rtms pulses at an intensity of 130% hand motor threshold for 5 consecutive days Ten minutes of PAS to the unlesioned pharyngeal cortex/pas was delivered by pairing a pharyngeal electrical stimulus (0.2-millisecond pulse) with a single TMS pulse on the pharyngeal MI at the intensity of motor threshold (MT) plus 20% of stimulator output/with an interstimulus interval of 100 milliseconds Anodal transcranial direct current stimulation (tdcs) over 5 consecutive days (2 ma for 30 min) Anodal tdcs group (1 ma for 20 min), or (2) sham group (1 ma for 30 s) Site and side of rtms/tdcs application The mylohyoid cortical area of the healthy hemisphere Affected hemisphere/esophageal motor area Both hemispheres affected and unaffected hemisphere With an interstimulus interval of 100 milliseconds, based on previous investigations Sensorimotor cortical representation of swallowing in the unaffected hemisphere/middistance between C3 and T3 on the left or C4andT4onthe right hemisphere Over the pharyngeal motor cortex of the affected hemisphere during 30 min of conventional swallowing training for 10 days Assessment test/results Dysphagia handicap index and videofluoroscopy/initially, the score was 43 ± 9 of a possible 120 which decreased to 30 ± 7(P =.05) after rtms/there was an improvement of swallowing coordination, with a decrease in swallow reaction time for liquids Clinical ratings of dysphagia and motor disability were assessed before and immediately after the last session and then again after 1 and 2 months. The amplitude of the motor-evoked potential (MEP) evoked by single-pulse TMS was also assessed before and at 1 month in 16 of the patients. Real rtms led to a significantly greater improvement compared with sham in dysphagia and motor disability that was maintained over 2 months of follow-up. This was accompanied by a significant increase in the amplitude of the esophageal MEP evoked from either the stroke or non-stroke hemisphere Clinical ratings of dysphagia and motor disability were assessed before and immediately after the last session, and then again after 1 and 2 months. Active rtms improved dysphagia compared with sham rtms (P =.001) Significantly increased the cortical excitability of the un-affected hemisphere, which was accompanied by a decrease in penetration aspiration scores and changes in bolus transport timings, with corresponding decreases in the pharyngeal response times and transit times of bolus flow. There was also a small but significant increase in the affected hemisphere when compared with the hemispheric baseline pharyngeal representation excitability Swallowing scale, dysphagia outcome and severity scale (DOSS), patients who received anodal tdcs gained 2.60 points improvement in DOSS scores compared to patients in the sham stimulation group who showed an improvement of 1.25 points (P =.019) after controlling for the effects of other aforementioned variables. 6 out of 7 (86%) patients in tdcs stimulation group gained at least 2 points improvement compared with 3 out of 7 (43%) patients in sham group (P =.107) Functional dysphagia scale (FDS) scores based on VFSS were measured at baseline and immediately and 3 months after the intervention. FDS scores improved in both groups without significant differences. However, 3 months after the intervention, anodal tdcs elicited greater improvement in terms of FDS compared to the sham group (β = 7.79, P =.041)

5 Neuroenterology 5 Figure 1: Cortical map area (number of stimulation points) and peak-to-peak amplitudes of esophageal MEPs evoked from the stroke and non-stroke hemispheres in the 10 subjects who received real rtms before and 1 month after treatment. Note the increase in the area of the cortical map in the stroke but not in the non-stroke hemisphere, and the increase in MEP amplitude in both hemispheres after rtms treatment. Data are expressed as mean ±SE; see Khedr et al. [35]. In the second study, Khedr and Abo-Elfetoh [33] recruited patients with lateral medullary syndrome and other brainstem infarctions in a double randomized trial (real versus sham stimulation). They applied rtms over both hemispheres, with the hypothesis that bilateral stimulation of the cortical swallowing motor areas would increase excitability of corticobulbar projections to brainstem swallowing nuclei and improve swallowing. They found that effect of rtms on dysphagia was clear in both patient groups and was greater than the effect on other measures of general motor function. Indeed, almost all patients who received real rtms recovered swallowing to different degrees immediately after the fifth session and this improvement was maintained for at least 2 months, while Figure 2: Changes in mean different rating scores of dysphagia (a), Barthel index (b), NIHSS (c), and hand grip strength (d) at the four assessment points for the patients with LMI. The first assessment was immediately prior to commencing repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rtms) treatment (Pre), the second (Post session) was immediately after the end of the first and the second months, respectively. Each group separately shows significant improvement. However the mean scores of the patients who received active rtms are significantly better than sham group over the course of the treatment in Barthel index scale only, while other rating scales showed no significant differences. Data are expressed as mean ±SE; see Khedr and Abo-Elfetoh [33]. patients who received sham rtms still had overt dysphagia at the end of 2 months (Figures 2 and 3). They proposed that the effect might be related to the fact that control of swallowing is usually bilateral whereas the lesion in LMI is usually unilateral. Thus, the remaining intact ipsilateral premotor neurons and the contralateral center in the medulla oblongata may eventually begin to operate and overcome the severity and long-term persistence of dysphagia. If so, the functional recovery that was observed in the patients could be due to rtms speeding up this natural process of recovery. However, it cannot exclude other effects on less direct pathways from the cortex to the brainstem that could contribute to recovery, particularly those in the brainstem infarct subgroup in which lesions were bilateral Hz rtms applied to patients with chronic dysphagic stroke Interestingly, the use of neurostimulation in patients with chronic dysphagic stroke has been reported before; in one recent study [58], 1 Hz rtms (an inhibitory stimulation paradigm) was applied, in a specific regimen, over the intact hemisphere in stroke-affected patients with very mild chronic dysphagia who were a mean of 56 weeks post

6 6 Neuroenterology hemisphere. This was accompanied by reduced aspiration penetration scores and changes in bolus transport timings, with corresponding decreases in the pharyngeal response times and transit times of bolus flow. There was also a small but significant increase in excitability of the pharyngeal representation in the affected hemisphere when compared with baseline. Figure 3: Changes in mean different rating scores of dysphagia (a), Barthel index (b), NIHSS (c), and hand grip strength (d) at the four assessment points for the patients with brainstem infarction. The first assessment was immediately prior to commencing repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rtms) treatment (Pre), the second (Post session) was immediately after the end of the first and the fourth assessment at the end of the second month. Each group separately shows significant improvement. However, the mean scores of the patients who received active rtms are significantly better than sham group in dysphagia rating score only over the course of the treatment, while no significant differences in the other scales were recorded between groups. Data are expressed as mean ±SE; see Khedr and Abo-Elfetoh [33]. stroke. Even though the study was not controlled and the patients were not severely dysphagic, immediate behavioral effects were observed. 7. Paired associative stimulation (PAS) applied to patients with chronic dysphagic stroke PAS is a technique that induces heterosynaptic plasticity in the motor and somatosensory cortical areas by combining peripheral stimulation of the targeted muscle with cortical stimulation over the representational area of that muscle in the MI. Long-term changes in M1 excitability can be produced by repeatedly combining these two modalities, peripheral and central, and by separating them with a specific time interval [44]. The effectiveness of facilitatory PAS to the contralesional cortex in brain injury was explored in a pilot study of patients with severe dysphagic stroke (mean time poststroke, 38.8 ± 24.4 weeks), 5 of which were tube fed [44]. Although the number of patients (6 patients) was small, application of PAS over the contralesional pharyngeal MI significantly increased cortical excitability of the same 8. Transcranial direct current stimulation (tdcs) and acute stroke dysphagia tdcs is another noninvasive brain stimulation technique that utilizes weak, direct current to produce shifts in neuronal excitability [50, 51] and can be combined with swallowing maneuvers or exercises. It has generated great interest recently because of its ease of use, patient tolerability, and safety profile which is of particular importance during the acute/subacute phases of a stroke. It has been shown to improve motor functions in chronic stroke patients [27, 54]. Moreover, the presence of a sham mode makes it possible to examine effects in a blinded trial paradigm [14]. Recent work has shown that application of anodal tdcs to the pharyngeal motor cortex in healthy human subjects increases pharyngeal excitability in an intensity-dependent manner [30]. Kumar et al. [38] investigated whether anodal TDCS in combination with swallowing maneuvers facilitates swallowing recovery in dysphagic stroke patients during early stroke convalescence (acute/subacute unilateral hemispheric infarction). They randomized fourteen patients with subacute unilateral hemispheric infarction to tdcs or sham stimulation of the sensorimotor swallowing representation in the unaffected hemisphere for five consecutive days with concurrent standardized swallowing maneuvers. Severity of dysphagia was measured using a validated swallowing scale, the dysphagia outcome and severity scale (DOSS), before the first and after the last session of tdcs or sham. They found that patients who received anodal tdcs improved by 2.60 points compared to patients in the sham stimulation group who improved by 1.25 points (P =.019) after controlling for the effects of other variables. Six out of 7 (86%) patients in the real tdcs group gained at least 2 points improvement compared with 3 out of 7 (43%) patients in the sham group (P =.107). They concluded that since brainstem swallowing centers receive a bilateral cortical innervation, measures that enhance cortical input and sensorimotor control of brainstem swallowing may be beneficial for dysphagia recovery. Another study using tdcs undertaken by Yang et al. [61] recruited 16 patients with post-stroke dysphagia, who were diagnosed using video fluoroscopic swallowing (VFSS). They were randomly assigned into two groups: (1) anodal tdcs (1 ma for 20 min), or (2) sham (1 ma for 30 s) over the pharyngeal motor cortex of the affected hemisphere

7 Neuroenterology 7 during 30 min of conventional swallowing training daily for 10 days. Functional dysphagia scale (FDS) scores based on VFSS were measured at baseline, immediately, and 3 months after the intervention. They found that immediately after the intervention, FDS scores had improved to the same extent in both groups. However, 3 months later, the group that had received anodal tdcs showed greater improvement in terms of FDS compared to the sham group (P =.041) after controlling for age, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score, lesion size, baseline FDS score, and time from stroke onset. They concluded that anodal tdcs applied over the affected pharyngeal motor cortex can enhance the outcome of swallowing training in post-stroke dysphagia. 9. Mechanism of action of noninvasive brain stimulation (rtms and tdcs) on post-stroke dysphagia Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation can produce long-lasting effects on the excitability of the motor cortex that in some instances have been shown to disappear after taking drugs that interfere with NMDA receptor function [14]. This suggests that some of the effects may be mediated by changes in synaptic function in the cortex that are analogous to long-term potentiation or depression demonstrated in experiments on animals. In addition, it is also known from both physiological and imaging studies that the effects of rtms occur not only at the site of stimulation but also in connected structures, presumably via activation of synaptic inputs at those sites. Gow et al. [16] and Khedr et al. [35] showed that rtms over the swallowing cortex of one hemisphere increases the excitability of the output from both hemispheres. Indeed, it seems likely that the functional recovery that they observed was due to this change in corticobulbar input to the brainstem swallowing centers. It is interesting to note that the physiological pattern of recovery after rtms may differ from the natural course of recovery as described by Hamdy et al. [21]. Both Hamdy et al. [16] and Khedr et al. [35] found that patients who were initially dysphagic after stroke had very inexcitable projections from the stroke hemisphere. Nevertheless, it is interesting to speculate that perhaps during natural recovery, the increased excitability of the non-stroke hemisphere might have suppressed function in the stroke hemisphere, as has been proposed for hand and arm function. If so, then the decision to apply rtms to the stroke hemisphere may not only have encouraged recovery of the affected side, but also counteracted any suppressive effect from the non-stroke side [36]. Therapies that combine swallowing practice with rtms/tdcs usually consider that the important mechanism of action is linking motor outputs with brain stimulation. However, such interventions also link sensory inputs with stimulation. Sensory input from the pharynx in stroke patients is known by itself to increase the excitability of the swallowing motor cortex of the unaffected hemisphere [13]. When paired with rtms/tdcs, this effect may be enhanced and focused topographically onto the pharyngeal motor representation via the mechanisms of paired associative stimulation [57]. Perhaps a similar effect occurs when training is paired with brain stimulation, and this improves performance beyond levels reached by each intervention alone [5,39]. 10. Recommendation and future directions for rtms studies in dysphagia Together, these studies represent important first steps in understanding how rtms can be used to reorganize motor areas of stroke patients. However, much work is still required to optimize the way rtms is utilized to affect motor recovery, performance, and learning in stroke patients. These investigations will also need to address many different contributing factors that might affect the response to brain stimulation from patient characteristics to rtms dosing. Even the optimal site of stimulation is not settled. It is highly possible that patients will need to be assessed prior to application of brain stimulation in order to understand how their brain has been reorganized between injury and the time of the intervention The direction of future research lies in detailed understanding of the natural recovery of post-stroke dysphagia and of the ability to enhance this recovery. 11. Conclusion The use of transcranial magnetic stimulation has helped improve our understanding of the mechanisms underlying recovery of motor function after stroke. This in turn has opened an opportunity to test repetitive TMS as well as other interventions to affect motor behavior. At this point, it is clear that it is possible to modulate motor function in stroke patients. However, more studies are needed to advance our knowledge of the recovery processes after brain lesions, to determine optimal stimulation parameters, and to understand how different patient characteristics influence response to noninvasive brain stimulation. References [1] Q. Aziz, J. C. Rothwell, S. Hamdy, J. Barlow, and D. G. Thompson, The topographic representation of esophageal motor function on the human cerebral cortex, Gastroenterology, 111 (1996), [2] D.H.Barer,The natural history and functional consequences of dysphagia after hemispheric stroke, J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry, 52 (1989), [3] R. B. Butcher II, Treatment of chronic aspiration as a complication of cerebrovascular accident, Laryngoscope, 92 (1982), [4] A.Car,A.Jean,andC.Roman,A pontine primary relay for ascending projections of the superior laryngeal nerve,expbrain Res, 22 (1975),

8 8 Neuroenterology [5] P. Celnik, N. J. Paik, Y. Vandermeeren, M. Dimyan, and L. G. Cohen, Effects of combined peripheral nerve stimulation and brain polarization on performance of a motor sequence task after chronic stroke, Stroke, 40 (2009), [6] S. C. Cramer and E. P. Bastings, Mapping clinically relevant plasticity after stroke, Neuropharmacology, 39 (2000), [7] D. J. Curtis, Laryngeal dynamics, Crit Rev Diagn Imaging, 18 (1982), [8] S. K. Daniels, K. Brailey, and A. L. Foundas, Lingual discoordination and dysphagia following acute stroke: analyses of lesion localization, Dysphagia, 14 (1999), [9] S. K. Daniels and A. L. Foundas, The role of the insular cortex in dysphagia, Dysphagia, 12 (1997), [10] W. J. Dodds, E. T. Stewart, and J. A. Logemann, Physiology and radiology of the normal oral and pharyngeal phases of swallowing, AJR Am J Roentgenol, 154 (1990), [11] R. W. Doty, Influence of stimulus pattern on reflex deglutition, Am J Physiol, 166 (1951), [12] R. Dziewas, P. Sörös, R. Ishii, W. Chau, E. B. Henningsen H, Ringelstein, et al., Neuroimaging evidence for cortical involvement in the preparation and in the act of swallowing, Neuroimage, 20 (2003), [13] C. Fraser, M. Power, S. Hamdy, J. Rothwell, D. Hobday, I. Hollander, et al., Driving plasticity in human adult motor cortex is associated with improved motor function after brain injury, Neuron, 34 (2002), [14] P. C. Gandiga, F. C. Hummel, and L. G. Cohen, Transcranial DC stimulation (tdcs): a tool for double-blind sham-controlled clinical studies in brain stimulation, Clin Neurophysiol, 117 (2006), [15] C. Gordon, R. Langton-Hewer, and D. T. Wade, Dysphagia in acute stroke, Br Med J, 295 (1987), [16] D. Gow, J. Rothwell, A. Hobson, D. Thompson, and S. Hamdy, Induction of long-term plasticity in human swallowing motor cortex following repetitive cortical stimulation, Clin Neurophysiol, 115 (2004), [17] S. Hamdy, Q. Aziz, J. C. Rothwell, R. Crone, D. Hughes, R. C. Tallis, et al., Explaining oropharyngeal dysphagia after unilateral hemispheric stroke, Lancet, 350 (1997), [18] S. Hamdy, Q. Aziz, J. C. Rothwell, M. Power, K. D. Singh, D. A. Nicholson, et al., Recovery of swallowing after dysphagic stroke relates to functional reorganization in the intact motor cortex, Gastroenterology, 115 (1998), [19] S. Hamdy, Q. Aziz, J. C. Rothwell, K. D. Singh, J. Barlow, D. G. Hughes, et al., The cortical topography of human swallowing musculature in health and disease, Nat Med, 2 (1996), [20] S.Hamdy,D.J.Mikulis,A.Crawley,S.Xue,H.Lau,S.Henry, et al., Cortical activation during human volitional swallowing: an event-related fmri study, Am J Physiol, 277 (1999), G219 G225. [21] S. Hamdy and J. C. Rothwell, Gut feelings about recovery after stroke: the organization and reorganization of human swallowing motor cortex, Trends Neurosci, 21 (1998), [22] S. Hamdy, J. C. Rothwell, Q. Aziz, K. D. Singh, and D. G. Thompson, Long-term reorganization of human motor cortex driven by short-term sensory stimulation, Nat Neurosci, 1 (1998), [23] S. Hamdy, J. C. Rothwell, Q. Aziz, and D. G. Thompson, Organization and reorganization of human swallowing motor cortex: implications for recovery after stroke, Clin Sci (Lond), 99 (2000), [24] S. Hamdy, J. C. Rothwell, D. J. Brooks, D. Bailey, Q. Aziz, and D. G. Thompson, Identification of the cerebral loci processing human swallowing with H 2 15 O PET activation, J Neurophysiol, 81 (1999), [25] J. Hellemans, W. Pelemans, and G. Vantrappen, Pharyngoesophageal swallowing disorders and the pharyngoesophageal sphincter, Med Clin North Am, 65 (1981), [26] J. Horner, F. G. Buoyer, M. J. Alberts, and M. J. Helms, Dysphagia following brain-stem stroke. Clinical correlates and outcome, Arch Neurol, 48 (1991), [27] F. Hummel, P. Celnik, P. Giraux, A. Floel, W. H. Wu, C. Gerloff, et al., Effects of non-invasive cortical stimulation on skilled motor function in chronic stroke, Brain, 128 (2005), [28] A. Hussain, S. Woolfrey, J. Massey, A. Geddes, and J. Cox, Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy, Postgrad Med J, 72 (1996), [29] A. James, K. Kapur, and A. B. Hawthorne, Long-term outcome of percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy feeding in patients with dysphagic stroke, Age Ageing, 27 (1998), [30] S. Jefferson, S. Mistry, S. Singh, J. Rothwell, and S. Hamdy, Characterizing the application of transcranial direct current stimulation in human pharyngeal motor cortex, AmJPhysiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol, 297 (2009), G1035 G1040. [31] B. Jones and M. W. Donner, Examination of the patient with dysphagia, Radiology, 167 (1988), [32] I.L.Katzan,R.D.Cebul,S.H.Husak,N.V.Dawson,andD.W. Baker, The effect of pneumonia on mortality among patients hospitalized for acute stroke, Neurology, 60 (2003), [33] E. M. Khedr and N. Abo-Elfetoh, Therapeutic role of rtms on recovery of dysphagia in patients with lateral medullary syndrome and brainstem infarction, J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry, 81 (2010), [34] E. M. Khedr, N. Abo-Elfetoh, M. A. Ahmed, N. F. Kamel, M. Farook, and M. F. El Karn, Dysphagia and hemispheric stroke: a transcranial magnetic study, Neurophysiol Clin, 38 (2008), [35] E. M. Khedr, N. Abo-Elfetoh, and J. C. Rothwell, Treatment of post-stroke dysphagia with repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation, Acta Neurol Scand, 119 (2009), [36] E. M. Khedr and N. A. Fetoh, Short- and long-term effect of rtms on motor function recovery after ischemic stroke, Restor Neurol Neurosci, 28 (2010), [37] D. E. Kuhl, Imaging local brain function with emission computed tomography, Radiology, 150 (1984), [38] S. Kumar, C. W. Wagner, C. Frayne, L. Zhu, M. Selim, W. Feng, et al., Noninvasive brain stimulation may improve stroke-related dysphagia: a pilot study, Stroke, 42 (2011), [39] R. Lindenberg, V. Renga, L. L. Zhu, D. Nair, and G. Schlaug, Bihemispheric brain stimulation facilitates motor recovery in chronic stroke patients, Neurology, 75 (2010), [40] G. Mann, G. J. Hankey, and D. Cameron, Swallowing function after stroke: prognosis and prognostic factors at 6 months, Stroke, 30 (1999), [41] R. E. Martin, B. G. Goodyear, J. S. Gati, and R. S. Menon, Cerebral cortical representation of automatic and volitional swallowing in humans, J Neurophysiol, 85 (2001), [42] R. E. Martin and B. J. Sessle, The role of the cerebral cortex in swallowing, Dysphagia, 8 (1993), [43] L. V. Metman, J. S. Bellevich, S. M. Jones, M. D. Barber, and L. J. Streletz, Topographic mapping of human motor cortex with transcranial magnetic stimulation: Homunculus revisited, Brain Topogr, 6 (1993), [44] E. Michou, S. Mistry, S. Jefferson, S. Singh, J. Rothwell, and S. Hamdy, Targeting unlesioned pharyngeal motor cortex improves swallowing in healthy individuals and after dysphagic stroke, Gastroenterology, 142 (2012), [45] A. J. Miller, Characteristics of the swallowing reflex induced by peripheral nerve and brain stem stimulation, Exp Neurol, 34 (1972), [46] A. J. Miller, Deglutition, Physiol Rev, 62 (1982),

9 Neuroenterology 9 [47] A. J. Miller, Neurophysiological basis of swallowing, Dysphagia, 1 (1986), [48] F. Miller and C. Sherrington, Some observations on the buccopharyngeal stage of reflex deglutition in the cat, QJExp Physiol, 9 (1916), [49] K. M. Mosier, W. C. Liu, J. A. Maldjian, R. Shah, and B. Modi, Lateralization of cortical function in swallowing: a functional MR imaging study, AJNR Am J Neuroradiol, 20 (1999), [50] M. A. Nitsche and W. Paulus, Excitability changes induced in the human motor cortex by weak transcranial direct current stimulation, J Physiol, 527 (2000), [51] M. A. Nitsche and W. Paulus, Sustained excitability elevations induced by transcranial DC motor cortex stimulation in humans, Neurology, 57 (2001), [52] S. K. Raha and K. Woodhouse, The use of percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) in 161 consecutive elderly patients, Age Ageing, 23 (1994), [53] J. Robbins and R. L. Levin, Swallowing after unilateral stroke of the cerebral cortex: Preliminary experience, Dysphagia, 3 (1988), [54] G. Schlaug, V. Renga, and D. Nair, Transcranial direct current stimulation in stroke recovery, Arch Neurol, 65 (2008), [55] D. G. Smithard, Swallowing and stroke. Neurological effects and recovery, Cerebrovasc Dis, 14 (2002), 1 8. [56] D. G. Smithard, P. A. O Neill, R. E. England, C. L. Park, R. Wyatt, D. F. Martin, et al., The natural history of dysphagia following a stroke, Dysphagia, 12 (1997), [57] K. Stefan, E. Kunesch, L. G. Cohen, R. Benecke, and J. Classen, Induction of plasticity in the human motor cortex by paired associative stimulation, Brain, 123 (2000), [58] E. Verin and A. M. Leroi, Poststroke dysphagia rehabilitation by repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation: a noncontrolled pilot study, Dysphagia, 24 (2009), [59] E. M. Wassermann, L. M. McShane, M. Hallett, and L. G. Cohen, Noninvasive mapping of muscle representations in human motor cortex, Electroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol, 85 (1992), 1 8. [60] Y. Watanabe, S. Abe, T. Ishikawa, Y. Yamada, and G. Y. Yamane, Cortical regulation during the early stage of initiation of voluntary swallowing in humans, Dysphagia, 19 (2004), [61] E. J. Yang, S. R. Baek, J. Shin, J. Y. Lim, H. J. Jang, Y. K. Kim, et al., Effects of transcranial direct current stimulation (tdcs) on post-stroke dysphagia, Restor Neurol Neurosci, 30 (2012),

The role of non-invasive brain stimulation in neurorehabilitation of poststroke

The role of non-invasive brain stimulation in neurorehabilitation of poststroke Case Report http://www.alliedacademies.org/journal-brain-neurology/ The role of non-invasive brain stimulation in neurorehabilitation of poststroke dysphagia. Meysam Amidfar*, Hadis Jalainejad Fasa University

More information

Critical Review: Do Non-Invasive Brain Stimulation Techniques Improve Swallowing Function Post-Stroke?

Critical Review: Do Non-Invasive Brain Stimulation Techniques Improve Swallowing Function Post-Stroke? Critical Review: Do Non-Invasive Brain Stimulation Techniques Improve Swallowing Function Post-Stroke? Stephanie Feldman M.Cl.Sc. (SLP) Candidate University of Western Ontario: School of Communication

More information

Case Rep Neurol 2014;6: DOI: / Published online: March 20, 2014

Case Rep Neurol 2014;6: DOI: / Published online: March 20, 2014 Published online: March 20, 2014 1662 680X/14/0061 0060$39.50/0 This is an Open Access article licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial 3.0 Unported license (CC BY-NC)

More information

Targeting Unlesioned Pharyngeal Motor Cortex Improves Swallowing in Healthy Individuals and After Dysphagic Stroke

Targeting Unlesioned Pharyngeal Motor Cortex Improves Swallowing in Healthy Individuals and After Dysphagic Stroke GASTROENTEROLOGY 2012;142:29 38 CLINICAL ALIMENTARY TRACT Targeting Unlesioned Pharyngeal Motor Cortex Improves Swallowing in Healthy Individuals and After Dysphagic Stroke EMILIA MICHOU,* SATISH MISTRY,*

More information

Swallowing Neurorehabilitation: From the Research Laboratory to Routine Clinical Application

Swallowing Neurorehabilitation: From the Research Laboratory to Routine Clinical Application 207 SPECIAL COMMUNICATION Swallowing Neurorehabilitation: From the Research Laboratory to Routine Clinical Application Sebastian H. Doeltgen, PhD, Maggie-Lee Huckabee, PhD ABSTRACT. Doeltgen SH, Huckabee

More information

The Journal of Physiology Neuroscience

The Journal of Physiology Neuroscience J Physiol 592.4 (2014) pp 695 709 695 The Journal of Physiology Neuroscience Transcranial direct current stimulation reverses neurophysiological and behavioural effects of focal inhibition of human pharyngeal

More information

Long-term reorganization of human motor cortex driven by short-term sensory stimulation

Long-term reorganization of human motor cortex driven by short-term sensory stimulation Long-term reorganization of human motor cortex driven by short-term sensory Shaheen Hamdy 1,2, John C. Rothwell 2, Qasim Aziz 1, Krishna D. Singh 3, and David G. Thompson 1 1 University Department of Gastroenterology,

More information

Cortical Control of Movement

Cortical Control of Movement Strick Lecture 2 March 24, 2006 Page 1 Cortical Control of Movement Four parts of this lecture: I) Anatomical Framework, II) Physiological Framework, III) Primary Motor Cortex Function and IV) Premotor

More information

The Use of Brain Stimulation in Dysphagia Management

The Use of Brain Stimulation in Dysphagia Management Dysphagia (2017) 32:209 215 DOI 10.1007/s00455-017-9789-z REVIEW ARTICLE The Use of Brain Stimulation in Dysphagia Management Andre Simons 1 Shaheen Hamdy 2 Received: 5 December 2016 / Accepted: 24 February

More information

Water immersion modulates sensory and motor cortical excitability

Water immersion modulates sensory and motor cortical excitability Water immersion modulates sensory and motor cortical excitability Daisuke Sato, PhD Department of Health and Sports Niigata University of Health and Welfare Topics Neurophysiological changes during water

More information

Sensorimotor modulation of human cortical swallowing pathways

Sensorimotor modulation of human cortical swallowing pathways Keywords: Cerebral cortex, Deglutition, Magnetic stimulation 6592 Journal of Physiology (1998), 506.3, pp. 857 866 857 Sensorimotor modulation of human cortical swallowing pathways Shaheen Hamdy *, Qasim

More information

Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation for Post-stroke Dysphagia: a Meta-analysis

Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation for Post-stroke Dysphagia: a Meta-analysis ORIGINAL ARTICLE rtms for Post-stroke Dysphagia Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation for Post-stroke Dysphagia: a Meta-analysis Nicole A. Bernardo-Aliling, 1 Adovich S. Rivera 2 and Paul Matthew

More information

Daniels SK & Huckabee ML (2008). Dysphagia Following Stroke. Muscles of Deglutition. Lateral & Mesial Premotor Area 6. Primary Sensory

Daniels SK & Huckabee ML (2008). Dysphagia Following Stroke. Muscles of Deglutition. Lateral & Mesial Premotor Area 6. Primary Sensory An Overview of Dysphagia in the Stroke Population Stephanie K. Daniels, PhD Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center PM & R, Baylor College of Medicine Communication Sciences and Disorders, University of Houston

More information

Original Article. Cortical activation during solid bolus swallowing

Original Article. Cortical activation during solid bolus swallowing J Med Dent Sci 2007; 54: 1 149 Original Article Cortical activation during solid bolus swallowing Isamu Shibamoto 1,4), Tokutaro Tanaka 2), Ichiro Fujishima 3), Norimasa Katagiri 3) and Hiroshi Uematsu

More information

Can brain stimulation help with relearning movement after stroke?

Can brain stimulation help with relearning movement after stroke? stroke.org.uk Final report summary Can brain stimulation help with relearning movement after stroke? The effect of transcranial direct current stimulation on motor learning after stroke PROJECT CODE: TSA

More information

Neurophysiology of systems

Neurophysiology of systems Neurophysiology of systems Motor cortex (voluntary movements) Dana Cohen, Room 410, tel: 7138 danacoh@gmail.com Voluntary movements vs. reflexes Same stimulus yields a different movement depending on context

More information

Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation in combination with neuromuscular electrical stimulation for treatment of post-stroke dysphagia

Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation in combination with neuromuscular electrical stimulation for treatment of post-stroke dysphagia Clinical Research Report Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation in combination with neuromuscular electrical stimulation for treatment of post-stroke dysphagia Journal of International Medical Research

More information

The Nervous System: Sensory and Motor Tracts of the Spinal Cord

The Nervous System: Sensory and Motor Tracts of the Spinal Cord 15 The Nervous System: Sensory and Motor Tracts of the Spinal Cord PowerPoint Lecture Presentations prepared by Steven Bassett Southeast Community College Lincoln, Nebraska Introduction Millions of sensory

More information

Main Aspects of the Management of Neurogenic Dysphagia

Main Aspects of the Management of Neurogenic Dysphagia Main Aspects of the Management of Neurogenic Dysphagia Mario Prosiegel/München German Society of Neurology (DGN) prosiegel@t-online.de DYSPHAGIA October 8-10, 2015 Pavia, Italy Overview Diagnosis Causal

More information

Medical Neuroscience Tutorial

Medical Neuroscience Tutorial Pain Pathways Medical Neuroscience Tutorial Pain Pathways MAP TO NEUROSCIENCE CORE CONCEPTS 1 NCC1. The brain is the body's most complex organ. NCC3. Genetically determined circuits are the foundation

More information

Non-therapeutic and investigational uses of non-invasive brain stimulation

Non-therapeutic and investigational uses of non-invasive brain stimulation Non-therapeutic and investigational uses of non-invasive brain stimulation Robert Chen, MA, MBBChir, MSc, FRCPC Catherine Manson Chair in Movement Disorders Professor of Medicine (Neurology), University

More information

Introduction to TMS Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation

Introduction to TMS Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Introduction to TMS Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Lisa Koski, PhD, Clin Psy TMS Neurorehabilitation Lab Royal Victoria Hospital 2009-12-14 BIC Seminar, MNI Overview History, basic principles, instrumentation

More information

Neurophysiological Basis of TMS Workshop

Neurophysiological Basis of TMS Workshop Neurophysiological Basis of TMS Workshop Programme 31st March - 3rd April 2017 Sobell Department Institute of Neurology University College London 33 Queen Square London WC1N 3BG Brought to you by 31 March

More information

Circuits & Behavior. Daniel Huber

Circuits & Behavior. Daniel Huber Circuits & Behavior Daniel Huber How to study circuits? Anatomy (boundaries, tracers, viral tools) Inactivations (lesions, optogenetic, pharma, accidents) Activations (electrodes, magnets, optogenetic)

More information

biological psychology, p. 40 The study of the nervous system, especially the brain. neuroscience, p. 40

biological psychology, p. 40 The study of the nervous system, especially the brain. neuroscience, p. 40 biological psychology, p. 40 The specialized branch of psychology that studies the relationship between behavior and bodily processes and system; also called biopsychology or psychobiology. neuroscience,

More information

b. The groove between the two crests is called 2. The neural folds move toward each other & the fuse to create a

b. The groove between the two crests is called 2. The neural folds move toward each other & the fuse to create a Chapter 13: Brain and Cranial Nerves I. Development of the CNS A. The CNS begins as a flat plate called the B. The process proceeds as: 1. The lateral sides of the become elevated as waves called a. The

More information

Naoyuki Takeuchi, MD, PhD 1, Takeo Tada, MD, PhD 2, Masahiko Toshima, MD 3, Yuichiro Matsuo, MD 1 and Katsunori Ikoma, MD, PhD 1 ORIGINAL REPORT

Naoyuki Takeuchi, MD, PhD 1, Takeo Tada, MD, PhD 2, Masahiko Toshima, MD 3, Yuichiro Matsuo, MD 1 and Katsunori Ikoma, MD, PhD 1 ORIGINAL REPORT J Rehabil Med 2009; 41: 1049 1054 ORIGINAL REPORT REPETITIVE TRANSCRANIAL MAGNETIC STIMULATION OVER BILATERAL HEMISPHERES ENHANCES MOTOR FUNCTION AND TRAINING EFFECT OF PARETIC HAND IN PATIENTS AFTER STROKE

More information

Clinical and cognitive predictors of swallowing recovery in stroke

Clinical and cognitive predictors of swallowing recovery in stroke JRRD Volume 43, Number 3, Pages 301 310 May/June 2006 Journal of Rehabilitation Research & Development Clinical and cognitive predictors of swallowing recovery in stroke Mae Fern Schroeder, BA; 1 Stephanie

More information

Note: Waxman is very sketchy on today s pathways and nonexistent on the Trigeminal.

Note: Waxman is very sketchy on today s pathways and nonexistent on the Trigeminal. Dental Neuroanatomy Thursday, February 3, 2011 Suzanne Stensaas, PhD Note: Waxman is very sketchy on today s pathways and nonexistent on the Trigeminal. Resources: Pathway Quiz for HyperBrain Ch. 5 and

More information

Correlation between changes of contralesional cortical activity and motor function recovery in patients with hemiparetic stroke

Correlation between changes of contralesional cortical activity and motor function recovery in patients with hemiparetic stroke SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH ARTICLE (ORIGINAL ARTICLE) Correlation between changes of contralesional cortical activity and motor function recovery in patients with hemiparetic stroke Akihiro MATSUURA, PhD,PT 1,

More information

tdcs in Clinical Disorders

tdcs in Clinical Disorders HBM Educational course Brain Stimulation: Past, Present and Future Hamburg, June 8th, 2014 tdcs in Clinical Disorders Agnes Flöel NeuroCure Clinical Research Center, Neurology, & Center for Stroke Research

More information

Combining tdcs and fmri. OHMB Teaching Course, Hamburg June 8, Andrea Antal

Combining tdcs and fmri. OHMB Teaching Course, Hamburg June 8, Andrea Antal Andrea Antal Department of Clinical Neurophysiology Georg-August University Goettingen Combining tdcs and fmri OHMB Teaching Course, Hamburg June 8, 2014 Classical Biomarkers for measuring human neuroplasticity

More information

I: To describe the pyramidal and extrapyramidal tracts. II: To discuss the functions of the descending tracts.

I: To describe the pyramidal and extrapyramidal tracts. II: To discuss the functions of the descending tracts. Descending Tracts I: To describe the pyramidal and extrapyramidal tracts. II: To discuss the functions of the descending tracts. III: To define the upper and the lower motor neurons. 1. The corticonuclear

More information

Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation and Regional Cardiocerebrovascular Center, Dong-A University College of Medicine, Busan, Korea

Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation and Regional Cardiocerebrovascular Center, Dong-A University College of Medicine, Busan, Korea Original rticle nn Rehabil Med 215;39(3):432-439 pissn: 2234-645 eissn: 2234-653 http://dx.doi.org/1.5535/arm.215.39.3.432 nnals of Rehabilitation Medicine Effect of Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation

More information

Homework Week 2. PreLab 2 HW #2 Synapses (Page 1 in the HW Section)

Homework Week 2. PreLab 2 HW #2 Synapses (Page 1 in the HW Section) Homework Week 2 Due in Lab PreLab 2 HW #2 Synapses (Page 1 in the HW Section) Reminders No class next Monday Quiz 1 is @ 5:30pm on Tuesday, 1/22/13 Study guide posted under Study Aids section of website

More information

Cranial Nerves VII to XII

Cranial Nerves VII to XII Cranial Nerves VII to XII MSTN121 - Neurophysiology Session 13 Department of Myotherapy Cranial Nerve VIII: Vestibulocochlear Sensory nerve with two distinct branches. Vestibular branch transmits information

More information

STRUCTURAL ORGANIZATION OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM

STRUCTURAL ORGANIZATION OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM STRUCTURAL ORGANIZATION OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM STRUCTURAL ORGANIZATION OF THE BRAIN The central nervous system (CNS), consisting of the brain and spinal cord, receives input from sensory neurons and directs

More information

Brain Stem and cortical control of motor function. Dr Z Akbari

Brain Stem and cortical control of motor function. Dr Z Akbari Brain Stem and cortical control of motor function Dr Z Akbari Brain stem control of movement BS nuclear groups give rise to descending motor tracts that influence motor neurons and their associated interneurons

More information

Lateral view of human brain! Cortical processing of touch!

Lateral view of human brain! Cortical processing of touch! Lateral view of human brain! Cortical processing of touch! How do we perceive objects held in the hand?! Touch receptors deconstruct objects to detect local features! Information is transmitted in parallel

More information

Trans-spinal direct current stimulation: a novel tool to promote plasticity in humans

Trans-spinal direct current stimulation: a novel tool to promote plasticity in humans Trans-spinal direct current stimulation: a novel tool to promote plasticity in humans Jean-Charles Lamy, PhD Brain and Spine Institute, Paris 1 Background Grecco et al., J Neuroresto, 2015 2 Background:

More information

Located below tentorium cerebelli within posterior cranial fossa. Formed of 2 hemispheres connected by the vermis in midline.

Located below tentorium cerebelli within posterior cranial fossa. Formed of 2 hemispheres connected by the vermis in midline. The Cerebellum Cerebellum Located below tentorium cerebelli within posterior cranial fossa. Formed of 2 hemispheres connected by the vermis in midline. Gray matter is external. White matter is internal,

More information

Using Transcranial magnetic stimulation to improve our understanding of Transverse Myelitis

Using Transcranial magnetic stimulation to improve our understanding of Transverse Myelitis Using Transcranial magnetic stimulation to improve our understanding of Transverse Myelitis Kathy Zackowski, PhD, OTR Kennedy Krieger Institute Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine TMS (transcranial

More information

Neural Integration I: Sensory Pathways and the Somatic Nervous System

Neural Integration I: Sensory Pathways and the Somatic Nervous System 15 Neural Integration I: Sensory Pathways and the Somatic Nervous System PowerPoint Lecture Presentations prepared by Jason LaPres Lone Star College North Harris An Introduction to Sensory Pathways and

More information

Patients with disorders of consciousness: how to treat them?

Patients with disorders of consciousness: how to treat them? Patients with disorders of consciousness: how to treat them? Aurore THIBAUT PhD Student Coma Science Group LUCA meeting February 25 th 2015 Pharmacological treatments Amantadine Giacino (2012) 184 TBI

More information

NEUROPLASTICITY. Implications for rehabilitation. Genevieve Kennedy

NEUROPLASTICITY. Implications for rehabilitation. Genevieve Kennedy NEUROPLASTICITY Implications for rehabilitation Genevieve Kennedy Outline What is neuroplasticity? Evidence Impact on stroke recovery and rehabilitation Human brain Human brain is the most complex and

More information

Stroke is the leading cause of long-term disability worldwide and a condition for which

Stroke is the leading cause of long-term disability worldwide and a condition for which NEUROLOGICAL REVIEW SECTION EDITOR: DAVID E. PLEASURE, MD Mechanisms Underlying Recovery of Motor Function After Stroke Nick S. Ward, MD; Leonardo G. Cohen, MD Stroke is the leading cause of long-term

More information

General Sensory Pathways of the Trunk and Limbs

General Sensory Pathways of the Trunk and Limbs General Sensory Pathways of the Trunk and Limbs Lecture Objectives Describe gracile and cuneate tracts and pathways for conscious proprioception, touch, pressure and vibration from the limbs and trunk.

More information

Swallowing Disorders and Their Management in Patients with Multiple Sclerosis

Swallowing Disorders and Their Management in Patients with Multiple Sclerosis National Multiple Sclerosis Society 733 Third Avenue New York, NY 10017-3288 Clinical Bulletin Information for Health Professionals Swallowing Disorders and Their Management in Patients with Multiple Sclerosis

More information

skilled pathways: distal somatic muscles (fingers, hands) (brainstem, cortex) are giving excitatory signals to the descending pathway

skilled pathways: distal somatic muscles (fingers, hands) (brainstem, cortex) are giving excitatory signals to the descending pathway L15 - Motor Cortex General - descending pathways: how we control our body - motor = somatic muscles and movement (it is a descending motor output pathway) - two types of movement: goal-driven/voluntary

More information

Recovery mechanisms from aphasia

Recovery mechanisms from aphasia Recovery mechanisms from aphasia Dr. Michal Ben-Shachar 977 Acquired language and reading impairments 1 Research questions Which brain systems can support recovery from aphasia? Which compensatory route

More information

The Three Pearls DOSE FUNCTION MOTIVATION

The Three Pearls DOSE FUNCTION MOTIVATION The Three Pearls DOSE FUNCTION MOTIVATION Barriers to Evidence-Based Neurorehabilitation No placebo pill for training therapy Blinded studies often impossible Outcome measures for movement, language, and

More information

Auditory and Vestibular Systems

Auditory and Vestibular Systems Auditory and Vestibular Systems Objective To learn the functional organization of the auditory and vestibular systems To understand how one can use changes in auditory function following injury to localize

More information

Activity of Daily Living and Motor Evoked Potentials in the Subacute Stroke Patients Kil Byung Lim, MD, Jeong-Ah Kim, MD

Activity of Daily Living and Motor Evoked Potentials in the Subacute Stroke Patients Kil Byung Lim, MD, Jeong-Ah Kim, MD Original Article Ann Rehabil Med 2013;37(1):82-87 pissn: 2234-0645 eissn: 2234-0653 http://dx.doi.org/10.5535/arm.2013.37.1.82 Annals of Rehabilitation Medicine Activity of Daily Living and Motor Evoked

More information

Chapter 12b. Overview

Chapter 12b. Overview Chapter 12b Spinal Cord Overview Spinal cord gross anatomy Spinal meninges Sectional anatomy Sensory pathways Motor pathways Spinal cord pathologies 1 The Adult Spinal Cord About 18 inches (45 cm) long

More information

Seminars. Non-invasive Brain Stimulation New strategy for Brain Recovery

Seminars. Non-invasive Brain Stimulation New strategy for Brain Recovery Seminars Department of Neurosciences University of Medicine and Pharmacy Iuliu Hatieganu Cluj-Napoca Romania Non-invasive Brain Stimulation New strategy for Brain Recovery DECEMBER 8TH 2017 RoNEURO INSTITUTE

More information

Stroke School for Internists Part 1

Stroke School for Internists Part 1 Stroke School for Internists Part 1 November 4, 2017 Dr. Albert Jin Dr. Gurpreet Jaswal Disclosures I receive a stipend for my role as Medical Director of the Stroke Network of SEO I have no commercial

More information

Neurosoft TMS. Transcranial Magnetic Stimulator DIAGNOSTICS REHABILITATION TREATMENT STIMULATION. of motor disorders after the stroke

Neurosoft TMS. Transcranial Magnetic Stimulator DIAGNOSTICS REHABILITATION TREATMENT STIMULATION. of motor disorders after the stroke Neurosoft TMS Transcranial Magnetic Stimulator DIAGNOSTICS REHABILITATION TREATMENT of corticospinal pathways pathology of motor disorders after the stroke of depression and Parkinson s disease STIMULATION

More information

Facilitation of reflex swallowing from the pharynx and larynx

Facilitation of reflex swallowing from the pharynx and larynx 167 Journal of Oral Science, Vol. 51, No. 2, 167-171, 2009 Original Facilitation of reflex swallowing from the pharynx and larynx Junichi Kitagawa 1,5), Kazuharu Nakagawa 2), Momoko Hasegawa 3), Tomoyo

More information

SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL. Table. Neuroimaging studies on the premonitory urge and sensory function in patients with Tourette syndrome.

SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL. Table. Neuroimaging studies on the premonitory urge and sensory function in patients with Tourette syndrome. SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL Table. Neuroimaging studies on the premonitory urge and sensory function in patients with Tourette syndrome. Authors Year Patients Male gender (%) Mean age (range) Adults/ Children

More information

Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation

Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Session 4 Virtual Lesion Approach I Alexandra Reichenbach MPI for Biological Cybernetics Tübingen, Germany Today s Schedule Virtual Lesion Approach : Study Design Rationale

More information

CONCETTI GENERALI SULLE DISFAGIE DI ORIGINE ESOFAGEA

CONCETTI GENERALI SULLE DISFAGIE DI ORIGINE ESOFAGEA LA DISFAGIA ESOFAGEA Pavia, 12.1.217 CONCETTI GENERALI SULLE DISFAGIE DI ORIGINE ESOFAGEA Michele Di Stefano Clinica Medica 1 Fondazione IRCCS Policlinico S.Matteo Università di Pavia Pavia PHARYNGOESOPHAGEAL

More information

Practical. Paired-pulse on two brain regions

Practical. Paired-pulse on two brain regions Practical Paired-pulse on two brain regions Paula Davila Pérez, MD Berenson-Allen Center for Noninvasive Brain Stimulation Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center Harvard Medical School Plans for the afternoon

More information

DEVELOPMENT OF BRAIN

DEVELOPMENT OF BRAIN Ahmed Fathalla OBJECTIVES At the end of the lecture, students should: List the components of brain stem. Describe the site of brain stem. Describe the relations between components of brain stem & their

More information

Magnetic stimulation and movement-related cortical activity for acute stroke with hemiparesis

Magnetic stimulation and movement-related cortical activity for acute stroke with hemiparesis ORIGINAL ARTICLE Magnetic stimulation and movement-related cortical activity for acute stroke with hemiparesis A. Matsuura a,b, K. Onoda a, H. Oguro a and S. Yamaguchi a a Department of Neurology, Faculty

More information

PREDICTION OF GOOD FUNCTIONAL RECOVERY AFTER STROKE BASED ON COMBINED MOTOR AND SOMATOSENSORY EVOKED POTENTIAL FINDINGS

PREDICTION OF GOOD FUNCTIONAL RECOVERY AFTER STROKE BASED ON COMBINED MOTOR AND SOMATOSENSORY EVOKED POTENTIAL FINDINGS J Rehabil Med 2010; 42: 16 20 ORIGINAL REPORT PREDICTION OF GOOD FUNCTIONAL RECOVERY AFTER STROKE BASED ON COMBINED MOTOR AND SOMATOSENSORY EVOKED POTENTIAL FINDINGS Sang Yoon Lee, MD 1, Jong Youb Lim,

More information

OVERVIEW. Today. Sensory and Motor Neurons. Thursday. Parkinsons Disease. Administra7on. Exam One Bonus Points Slides Online

OVERVIEW. Today. Sensory and Motor Neurons. Thursday. Parkinsons Disease. Administra7on. Exam One Bonus Points Slides Online OVERVIEW Today Sensory and Motor Neurons Thursday Parkinsons Disease Administra7on Exam One Bonus Points Slides Online 7 major descending motor control pathways from Cerebral Cortex or Brainstem

More information

Final Report. Title of Project: Quantifying and measuring cortical reorganisation and excitability with post-stroke Wii-based Movement Therapy

Final Report. Title of Project: Quantifying and measuring cortical reorganisation and excitability with post-stroke Wii-based Movement Therapy Final Report Author: Dr Penelope McNulty Qualification: PhD Institution: Neuroscience Research Australia Date: 26 th August, 2015 Title of Project: Quantifying and measuring cortical reorganisation and

More information

Summary of my talk. Cerebellum means little brain but a huge neural resource. Studying the cerebellum in. Chris Miall

Summary of my talk. Cerebellum means little brain but a huge neural resource. Studying the cerebellum in. Chris Miall Studying the cerebellum in sensory motor control Chris Miall Behavioural Brain Sciences School of Psychology University of Birmingham Summary of my talk Cerebellum means little brain but a huge neural

More information

Functional magnetic resonance imaging study on dysphagia after unilateral hemispheric stroke: a preliminary study

Functional magnetic resonance imaging study on dysphagia after unilateral hemispheric stroke: a preliminary study Functional magnetic resonance imaging study on dysphagia after unilateral hemispheric stroke: a preliminary study S Li, 1,2 C Luo, 3 B Yu, 4 B Yan, 1 Q Gong, 5,6 C He, 7 L He, 1 X Huang, 5 D Yao, 3 S Lui,

More information

Corticomotor representation of the sternocleidomastoid muscle

Corticomotor representation of the sternocleidomastoid muscle braini0203 Corticomotor representation of the sternocleidomastoid muscle Brain (1997), 120, 245 255 M. L. Thompson, 1,2 G. W. Thickbroom 1,2 and F. L. Mastaglia 1,2,3 1 Australian Neuromuscular Research

More information

PSYC& 100: Biological Psychology (Lilienfeld Chap 3) 1

PSYC& 100: Biological Psychology (Lilienfeld Chap 3) 1 PSYC& 100: Biological Psychology (Lilienfeld Chap 3) 1 1 What is a neuron? 2 Name and describe the functions of the three main parts of the neuron. 3 What do glial cells do? 4 Describe the three basic

More information

funzioni motorie e cognitive (nella malattia di Parkinson) Laura Avanzino

funzioni motorie e cognitive (nella malattia di Parkinson) Laura Avanzino Department of Experimental Medicine, section of Human Physiology Centre for Parkinson s Disease and Movement Disorders - University of Genoa funzioni motorie e cognitive (nella malattia di Parkinson) Laura

More information

Short and long-term effects of pharyngeal electrical stimulation on swallowing performance in healthy humans. Ryosuke Takeishi

Short and long-term effects of pharyngeal electrical stimulation on swallowing performance in healthy humans. Ryosuke Takeishi Short and long-term effects of pharyngeal electrical stimulation on swallowing performance in healthy humans Ryosuke Takeishi Division of Dysphagia Rehabilitation Niigata University Graduate School of

More information

Anatomical Substrates of Somatic Sensation

Anatomical Substrates of Somatic Sensation Anatomical Substrates of Somatic Sensation John H. Martin, Ph.D. Center for Neurobiology & Behavior Columbia University CPS The 2 principal somatic sensory systems: 1) Dorsal column-medial lemniscal system

More information

The purpose of this systematic review is to collate evidence regarding the

The purpose of this systematic review is to collate evidence regarding the Authors: Manuela Corti, PT Carolynn Patten, PhD, PT William Triggs, MD Affiliations: From the Neural Control of Movement Lab (MC, CP, WT), Brain Rehabilitation Research Center, Malcom Randall VAMC, Gainesville,

More information

Voluntary Movement. Ch. 14: Supplemental Images

Voluntary Movement. Ch. 14: Supplemental Images Voluntary Movement Ch. 14: Supplemental Images Skeletal Motor Unit: The basics Upper motor neuron: Neurons that supply input to lower motor neurons. Lower motor neuron: neuron that innervates muscles,

More information

HUMAN MOTOR CONTROL. Emmanuel Guigon

HUMAN MOTOR CONTROL. Emmanuel Guigon HUMAN MOTOR CONTROL Emmanuel Guigon Institut des Systèmes Intelligents et de Robotique Université Pierre et Marie Curie CNRS / UMR 7222 Paris, France emmanuel.guigon@upmc.fr e.guigon.free.fr/teaching.html

More information

The neurvous system senses, interprets, and responds to changes in the environment. Two types of cells makes this possible:

The neurvous system senses, interprets, and responds to changes in the environment. Two types of cells makes this possible: NERVOUS SYSTEM The neurvous system senses, interprets, and responds to changes in the environment. Two types of cells makes this possible: the neuron and the supporting cells ("glial cells"). Neuron Neurons

More information

Brainstem. By Dr. Bhushan R. Kavimandan

Brainstem. By Dr. Bhushan R. Kavimandan Brainstem By Dr. Bhushan R. Kavimandan Development Ventricles in brainstem Mesencephalon cerebral aqueduct Metencephalon 4 th ventricle Mylencephalon 4 th ventricle Corpus callosum Posterior commissure

More information

Lecture - Chapter 13: Central Nervous System

Lecture - Chapter 13: Central Nervous System Lecture - Chapter 13: Central Nervous System 1. Describe the following structures of the brain, what is the general function of each: a. Cerebrum b. Diencephalon c. Brain Stem d. Cerebellum 2. What structures

More information

Gross Organization I The Brain. Reading: BCP Chapter 7

Gross Organization I The Brain. Reading: BCP Chapter 7 Gross Organization I The Brain Reading: BCP Chapter 7 Layout of the Nervous System Central Nervous System (CNS) Located inside of bone Includes the brain (in the skull) and the spinal cord (in the backbone)

More information

CONTENTS. Foreword George H. Kraft. Henry L. Lew

CONTENTS. Foreword George H. Kraft. Henry L. Lew EVOKED POTENTIALS Foreword George H. Kraft xi Preface Henry L. Lew xiii Overview of Artifact Reduction and Removal in Evoked Potential and Event-Related Potential Recordings 1 Martin R. Ford, Stephen Sands,

More information

Functional neuroplasticity after stroke: clinical implications and future directions

Functional neuroplasticity after stroke: clinical implications and future directions Functional neuroplasticity after stroke: clinical implications and future directions Dr. Michael R. Borich, PT, DPT, PhD Division of Physical Therapy, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine Emory University

More information

Research Perspectives in Clinical Neurophysiology

Research Perspectives in Clinical Neurophysiology Research Perspectives in Clinical Neurophysiology A position paper of the EC-IFCN (European Chapter of the International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology) representing ~ 8000 Clinical Neurophysiologists

More information

SOMATIC SENSATION PART I: ALS ANTEROLATERAL SYSTEM (or SPINOTHALAMIC SYSTEM) FOR PAIN AND TEMPERATURE

SOMATIC SENSATION PART I: ALS ANTEROLATERAL SYSTEM (or SPINOTHALAMIC SYSTEM) FOR PAIN AND TEMPERATURE Dental Neuroanatomy Thursday, February 3, 2011 Suzanne S. Stensaas, PhD SOMATIC SENSATION PART I: ALS ANTEROLATERAL SYSTEM (or SPINOTHALAMIC SYSTEM) FOR PAIN AND TEMPERATURE Reading: Waxman 26 th ed, :

More information

Neuromodulation in Dravet Syndrome. Eric BJ Segal, MD Director of Pediatric Epilepsy Northeast Regional Epilepsy Group Hackensack, New Jersey

Neuromodulation in Dravet Syndrome. Eric BJ Segal, MD Director of Pediatric Epilepsy Northeast Regional Epilepsy Group Hackensack, New Jersey Neuromodulation in Dravet Syndrome Eric BJ Segal, MD Director of Pediatric Epilepsy Northeast Regional Epilepsy Group Hackensack, New Jersey What is neuromodulation? Seizures are caused by synchronized

More information

Motor Systems I Cortex. Reading: BCP Chapter 14

Motor Systems I Cortex. Reading: BCP Chapter 14 Motor Systems I Cortex Reading: BCP Chapter 14 Principles of Sensorimotor Function Hierarchical Organization association cortex at the highest level, muscles at the lowest signals flow between levels over

More information

The NIHSS score is 4 (considering 2 pts for the ataxia involving upper and lower limbs.

The NIHSS score is 4 (considering 2 pts for the ataxia involving upper and lower limbs. Neuroscience case 5 1. Speech comprehension, ability to speak, and word use were normal in Mr. Washburn, indicating that aphasia (cortical language problem) was not involved. However, he did have a problem

More information

Systems Neuroscience Dan Kiper. Today: Wolfger von der Behrens

Systems Neuroscience Dan Kiper. Today: Wolfger von der Behrens Systems Neuroscience Dan Kiper Today: Wolfger von der Behrens wolfger@ini.ethz.ch 18.9.2018 Neurons Pyramidal neuron by Santiago Ramón y Cajal (1852-1934, Nobel prize with Camillo Golgi in 1906) Neurons

More information

The Central Nervous System

The Central Nervous System The Central Nervous System Cellular Basis. Neural Communication. Major Structures. Principles & Methods. Principles of Neural Organization Big Question #1: Representation. How is the external world coded

More information

The neurolinguistic toolbox Jonathan R. Brennan. Introduction to Neurolinguistics, LSA2017 1

The neurolinguistic toolbox Jonathan R. Brennan. Introduction to Neurolinguistics, LSA2017 1 The neurolinguistic toolbox Jonathan R. Brennan Introduction to Neurolinguistics, LSA2017 1 Psycholinguistics / Neurolinguistics Happy Hour!!! Tuesdays 7/11, 7/18, 7/25 5:30-6:30 PM @ the Boone Center

More information

Motor Functions of Cerebral Cortex

Motor Functions of Cerebral Cortex Motor Functions of Cerebral Cortex I: To list the functions of different cortical laminae II: To describe the four motor areas of the cerebral cortex. III: To discuss the functions and dysfunctions of

More information

Movimento volontario dell'arto superiore analisi, perturbazione, ottimizzazione

Movimento volontario dell'arto superiore analisi, perturbazione, ottimizzazione Movimento volontario dell'arto superiore analisi, perturbazione, ottimizzazione Antonio Currà UOS Neurologia Universitaria, Osp. A. Fiorini, Terracina UOC Neuroriabilitazione ICOT, Latina, Dir. Prof. F.

More information

TREATMENT-SPECIFIC ABNORMAL SYNAPTIC PLASTICITY IN EARLY PARKINSON S DISEASE

TREATMENT-SPECIFIC ABNORMAL SYNAPTIC PLASTICITY IN EARLY PARKINSON S DISEASE TREATMENT-SPECIFIC ABNORMAL SYNAPTIC PLASTICITY IN EARLY PARKINSON S DISEASE Angel Lago-Rodriguez 1, Binith Cheeran 2 and Miguel Fernández-Del-Olmo 3 1. Prism Lab, Behavioural Brain Sciences, School of

More information

V1-ophthalmic. V2-maxillary. V3-mandibular. motor

V1-ophthalmic. V2-maxillary. V3-mandibular. motor 4. Trigeminal Nerve I. Objectives:. Understand the types of sensory information transmitted by the trigeminal system.. Describe the major peripheral divisions of the trigeminal nerve and how they innervate

More information

Degree of freedom problem

Degree of freedom problem KINE 4500 Neural Control of Movement Lecture #1:Introduction to the Neural Control of Movement Neural control of movement Kinesiology: study of movement Here we re looking at the control system, and what

More information

KINE 4500 Neural Control of Movement. Lecture #1:Introduction to the Neural Control of Movement. Neural control of movement

KINE 4500 Neural Control of Movement. Lecture #1:Introduction to the Neural Control of Movement. Neural control of movement KINE 4500 Neural Control of Movement Lecture #1:Introduction to the Neural Control of Movement Neural control of movement Kinesiology: study of movement Here we re looking at the control system, and what

More information

Neural Basis of Motor Control

Neural Basis of Motor Control Neural Basis of Motor Control Central Nervous System Skeletal muscles are controlled by the CNS which consists of the brain and spinal cord. Determines which muscles will contract When How fast To what

More information

Myoclonic status epilepticus in hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy which recurred after somatosensory evoked potential testing

Myoclonic status epilepticus in hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy which recurred after somatosensory evoked potential testing ANNALS OF CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY CASE REPORT Ann Clin Neurophysiol 2017;19(2):136-140 Myoclonic status epilepticus in hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy which recurred after somatosensory evoked potential

More information