Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) has been extensively utilized in the treatment of post-stroke dysphagia; however, the effect of different tDCS protocols remains uncertain. This study aims to investigate the effect of tDCS on dysphagia after hemispheric stroke and compare the effect of tDCS among three protocols. A total of 90 hemispheric stroke patients were randomized into three groups: bilateral, contralesional, and ipsilesional tDCS. Each group received anodal tDCS over the orofacial sensorimotor cortex (S1M1) of the bilateral, contralesional, and ipsilesional hemispheres, respectively, administered for 20 sessions overall, combined with exercise-based swallowing therapy. After tDCS, both the dysphagia assessment scale and the swallow severity scale showed significant improvement in all three groups (all p < 0.01). In the comparisons among the three groups, the bilateral tDCS demonstrated significantly greater improvement than the contralesional and ipsilesional tDCS group in terms of the dysphagia assessment scale (all p < 0.001), and superior to contralesional tDCS group in terms of the swallow severity scale (p = 0.019). The analysis of ApEn showed increased cortical activity in both stimulated and non-stimulated areas of bilateral hemispheres after bilateral and unilateral tDCS. Moreover, larger cortical areas of bilateral hemispheres were activated after bilateral tDCS, compared to those after unilateral tDCS.Trial registration Chinese Clinical Trial Registry Identifier: ChiCTR-TRC-14004955, 16/07/2014.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12137586PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-04939-9DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

hemispheric stroke
12
transcranial direct
8
direct current
8
current stimulation
8
stroke patients
8
patients randomized
8
tdcs dysphagia
8
three groups
8
bilateral contralesional
8
contralesional ipsilesional
8

Similar Publications

Perinatal stroke is a vascular injury occurring early in life, often resulting in motor deficits (hemiplegic cerebral palsy/HCP). Comorbidities may also include poor neuropsychological outcomes, such as deficits in memory. Previous studies have used resting state functional MRI (fMRI) to demonstrate that functional connectivity (FC) within hippocampal circuits is associated with memory function in typically developing controls (TDC) and in adults after stroke, but this is unexplored in perinatal stroke.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Despite successful recanalization after endovascular thrombectomy, more than half of patients with acute ischemic stroke with large-vessel occlusions experience an unsatisfactory outcome. Incomplete microvascular reperfusion may contribute to it, but its occurrence remains debated, partly due to clinical observations of hyperperfusion after recanalization. This study investigates the relationship between ischemia duration, infarct development, microclot presence, and cerebral perfusion in a swine model of focal cerebral ischemia and reperfusion.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Numerous large-scale epidemiological studies investigating the trajectory of cognitive recovery after ischemic stroke have presented data suggesting an immediate drop in cognition acutely post-stroke followed by persistent, accelerated decline over time when averaged as a group. We sought to further examine this trend, speculating that the average persistent decline may be a reflection of two subgroups with vastly different prognoses: 1) a minority experiencing decline secondary to neurodegenerative processes like vascular dementia and Alzheimer's disease, and 2) a majority without marked progressive brain atrophy who typically see improvement. Our team thus investigated atrophy's association with language recovery, hypothesizing that declining naming performance in the year after left hemisphere ischemic stroke would be correlated to atrophy of the contralesional hemisphere.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Stroke can lead to neurological changes beyond the initial lesion site, including post-stroke crossed-cerebellar degeneration. While traditional methods typically rely on total lesion volume to assess remote effects, the spatial distribution of lesions may more accurately predict cerebellar atrophy and associated functional deficits. This study investigated whether anatomically specific cortical lesions contribute to cerebellar gray matter volume loss, expanding on the hypothesis that cerebellar atrophy may reflect more than global brain injury severity, and instead result from targeted disruption of cortico-cerebellar pathways.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Left hemisphere stroke causes functional changes to the language network and may shift aspects of language processing to right hemisphere homotopes of perisylvian language regions. The result of right hemisphere recruitment is unclear. Studies suggest the right pars triangularis (rPTr) engagement in language processing corresponds to higher dysfunction.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF