Useless, nothing in here will help survivors recover. It describes a problem, but uselessly provides no solution.
Limb linkage rehabilitation training-related changes in cortical activation and effective connectivity after stroke: A functional near-infrared spectroscopy study
Abstract
Stroke
remains the leading cause of long-term disability worldwide.
Rehabilitation training is essential for motor function recovery
following stroke. Specifically, limb linkage rehabilitation training can
stimulate motor function in the upper and lower limbs simultaneously.
This study aimed to investigate limb linkage rehabilitation task-related
changes in cortical activation and effective connectivity (EC) within a
functional brain network after stroke by using functional near-infrared
spectroscopy (fNIRS) imaging. Thirteen stroke patients with either left
hemiparesis (L-H group, n = 6) and or right hemiparesis (R-H group,
n = 7) and 16 healthy individuals (control group) participated in this
study. A multichannel fNIRS system was used to measure changes in
cerebral oxygenated hemoglobin (delta HbO2) and deoxygenated
hemoglobin (delta HHb) in the bilateral prefrontal cortices (PFCs),
motor cortices (MCs), and occipital lobes (OLs) during (1) the resting
state and (2) a motor rehabilitation task with upper and lower limb
linkage (first 10 min [task_S1], last 10 min [task_S2]). The
frequency-specific EC among the brain regions was calculated based on
coupling functions and dynamic Bayesian inference in frequency
intervals: high-frequency I (0.6–2 Hz) and II (0.145–0.6 Hz),
low-frequency III (0.052–0.145 Hz), and very-low-frequency IV
(0.021–0.052 Hz). The results showed that the stroke patients exhibited
an asymmetric (greater activation in the contralesional versus
ipsilesional motor region) cortical activation pattern versus healthy
controls. Compared with the healthy controls, the stroke patients showed
significantly lower EC (p < 0.025) in intervals I and II in
the resting and task states. The EC from the MC and OL to the right PFC
in interval IV was significantly higher in the R-H group than in the
control group during the resting and task states (p < 0.025).
Furthermore, the L-H group showed significantly higher EC from the MC
and OL to the left PFC in intervals III and IV during the task states
compared with the control group (p < 0.025). The significantly
increased influence of the MC and OL on the contralesional PFC in low-
and very-low-frequency bands suggested that plastic reorganization of
cognitive resources severed to compensate for impairment in stroke
patients during the motor rehabilitation task. This study can serve as a
basis for understanding task-related reorganization of functional brain
networks and developing novel assessment techniques for stroke
rehabilitation.
No comments:
Post a Comment