Characterizing the mechanisms of central and peripheral forms of neurostimulation in chronic dysphagic stroke patients

Emilia Michou, Satish Mistry, Samantha Jefferson, Philippa J Tyrrell, Shaheen Hamdy

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Background Swallowing problems following stroke may result in increased risk of aspiration pneumonia, malnutrition, and dehydration. Objective/hypothesis Our hypothesis was that three neurostimulation techniques would produce beneficial effects on chronic dysphagia following stroke through a common brain mechanism that would predict behavioral response. Methods In 18 dysphagic stroke patients (mean age: 66 ± 3 years, 3 female, time-post-stroke: 63 ± 15 weeks [±SD]), pharyngeal electromyographic responses were recorded after single-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) over the pharyngeal motor cortex, to measure corticobulbar excitability before, immediately, and 30 min, after real and sham applications of neurostimulation. Patients were randomized to a single session of either: pharyngeal electrical stimulation (PES), paired associative stimulation (PAS) or repetitive TMS (rTMS). Penetration-aspiration scores and bolus transfer timings were assessed before and after both real and sham interventions using videofluoroscopy. Results Corticobulbar excitability of pharyngeal motor cortex was beneficially modulated by PES, PAS and to a lesser extent by rTMS, with functionally relevant changes in the unaffected hemisphere. Following combining the results of real neurostimulation, an overall increase in corticobulbar excitability in the unaffected hemisphere (P =.005, F 1,17 = 10.6, ANOVA) with an associated 15% reduction in aspiration (P =.005, z = -2.79) was observed compared to sham. Conclusions In this mechanistic study, an increase in corticobulbar excitability the unaffected projection was correlated with the improvement in swallowing safety (P =.001, rho = -.732), but modality-specific differences were observed. Paradigms providing peripheral input favored change in neurophysiological and behavioral outcome measures in chronic dysphagia patients. Further larger cohort studies of neurostimulation in chronic dysphagic stroke are imperative. © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)66-73
    Number of pages7
    JournalBrain Stimulation
    Volume7
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Jan 2014

    Keywords

    • Chronic dysphagia
    • Neurostimulation
    • Plasticity
    • Stroke

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