In your Aim 1 you already have a high functioning survivor selected, high intensity walking is not normally possible. It took me years to get to that point.
http://dspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/23718
Author: Li, Xin
Citable URI:
http://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/23718
Advisor: Morton, Susanne M.; Reisman, Darcy S.
Publisher: University of Delaware
Date Issued: 2018
Abstract: The majority of stroke survivors
experience persistent motor impairments even with rehabilitation
treatments. An underlying mechanism for this is the decreased motor
cortical excitability in the lesioned hemisphere after stroke. Priming
techniques, such as acute exercise and transcranial direct current
stimulation (tDCS), can increase motor cortical excitability and enhance
motor learning in healthy individuals. But whether they have the same
effects in people with stroke is unclear. Selective serotonin-reuptake
inhibitors, a type of antidepressant medication, can change motor
cortical excitability in healthy individuals and in acute stroke
survivors. Moreover, they can interact with tDCS, changing the effects
of tDCS in healthy individuals. Given that up to 30% of stroke survivors
take antidepressant medications, this is an important factor to
consider when evaluating the effects of tDCS in stroke. The overall
purpose of this dissertation was to investigate the neurophysiological
effects of exercise priming and tDCS (with chronic antidepressant intake
as a factor), and to investigate the effects of tDCS on locomotor
learning in people with chronic stroke. ☐ In Aim 1, we showed that
exercise priming, in the form of 5 minutes of high-intensity walking,
induced increased motor cortical excitability in the lesioned
hemisphere, as measured in a resting upper extremity muscle. This
finding is significant because it provides evidence on the effectiveness
of a clinically feasible exercise priming paradigm to induce broad
excitability changes in the brain. ☐ In Aim 2, we showed that stroke
survivors taking antidepressant medications had higher motor cortical
excitability in the non-lesioned hemisphere compared to those not on
antidepressants. We also found that application of anodal tDCS as a
primer over the lesioned hemisphere produced differential effects on
excitability in the unstimulated, non-lesioned hemisphere, depending on
antidepressant-taking status. In antidepressant-takers, motor cortical
excitability in the non-lesioned hemisphere increased, while it
decreased compared to sham in those not taking antidepressants. These
findings draw attention to the fact that stroke survivors may not
respond in the same way to tDCS as healthy individuals, and that
antidepressants, and potentially other medications and stroke-related
factors, must be considered and their effects investigated before
providing tDCS as a clinical treatment. ☐ Finally,
in Aim 3, we showed
that anodal tDCS over the lesioned hemisphere did not have any effect on
split-belt treadmill locomotor learning and retention in chronic stroke
survivors. We speculate that split-belt adaptation may not be sensitive
to modulation by tDCS. Future studies should investigate whether tDCS
affects other types of locomotor learning. ☐ Overall, this work
demonstrates the potential of exercise priming for stroke recovery, and
highlights the complexity of tDCS usage in people with chronic stroke.
Future studies should focus on how individual differences affect priming
in stroke.
URI:
http://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/23718
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