http://nnr.sagepub.com/content/29/5/444?etoc
- Holly Rossiter, UCL Institute of Neurology, 33 Queen Square, London WC1N 3BG, UK. Email: h.rossiter@ucl.ac.uk
Abstract
Background and Objective. Mirror therapy
is a new form of stroke rehabilitation that uses the mirror reflection
of the unaffected hand in place of
the affected hand to augment movement training. The
mechanism of mirror therapy is not known but is thought to involve
changes
in cerebral organization. We used
magnetoencephalography (MEG) to measure changes in cortical activity
during mirror training
after stroke. In particular, we examined
movement-related changes in the power of cortical oscillations in the
beta (15-30
Hz) frequency range, known to be involved in
movement. Methods. Ten stroke patients with upper limb paresis
and 13 healthy controls were recorded using MEG while performing
bimanual hand
movements in 2 different conditions. In one,
subjects looked directly at their affected hand (or dominant hand in
controls),
and in the other, they looked at a mirror
reflection of their unaffected hand in place of their affected hand. The
movement-related
beta desynchronization was calculated in both
primary motor cortices.
Results. Movement-related beta
desynchronization was symmetrical during bilateral movement and
unaltered by the mirror condition
in controls. In the patients, movement-related beta
desynchronization was generally smaller than in controls, but greater
in contralesional compared to ipsilesional motor
cortex. This initial asymmetry in movement-related beta
desynchronization
between hemispheres was made more symmetrical by
the presence of the mirror.
Conclusions. Mirror therapy could potentially aid stroke rehabilitation by normalizing an asymmetrical pattern of movement-related beta
desynchronization in primary motor cortices during bilateral movement.
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