Brain Stimul
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Randomized Controlled Trial
High-Definition and Non-invasive Brain Modulation of Pain and Motor Dysfunction in Chronic TMD.
Temporomandibular disorders (TMD) have a high prevalence and in many patients pain and masticatory dysfunction persist despite a range of treatments. Non-invasive brain neuromodulatory methods, namely transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS), can provide relatively long-lasting pain relief in chronic pain patients. ⋯ Putative M1 stimulation by HD-tDCS selectively improved meaningful clinical sensory-discriminative pain and motor measures during stimulation, and up to four-weeks post-treatment in chronic myofascial TMD pain patients.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Clinical Response to tDCS Depends on Residual Brain Metabolism and Grey Matter Integrity in Patients With Minimally Conscious State.
Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) was recently shown to promote recovery of voluntary signs of consciousness in some patients in minimally conscious state (MCS). However, it remains unclear why clinical improvement is only observed in a subgroup of patients. ⋯ Our findings suggest that the transient increase of signs of consciousness following left DLPF tDCS in patients in MCS require grey matter preservation and residual metabolic activity in cortical and subcortical brain areas known to be involved in attention and working memory. These results further underline the critical role of long-range cortico-thalamic connections in consciousness recovery, providing important information for guidelines on the use of tDCS in disorders of consciousness.
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Non-invasive brain stimulation techniques may be useful adjuvants to promote recovery after stroke. They are typically used to facilitate ipsilesional cortical excitability directly, or indirectly by suppressing contralesional cortical excitability and reducing interhemispheric inhibition from the contralesional to ipsilesional hemisphere. However, most of the evidence for this approach comes from studies of patients at the chronic stage of recovery. ⋯ Neuromodulation interventions applied during spontaneous recovery may be more beneficial if they facilitate ipsilesional corticomotor excitability directly.
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Deep brain stimulation (DBS) targeting the dentato-thalamo-cortical (DTC) pathway at its origin in the lateral cerebellar nucleus (LCN) has been shown to enhance motor recovery in a rodent model of cortical ischemia. LCN DBS also yielded frequency-specific changes in motor cortex excitability in the normal brain, indexed by motor evoked potential (MEP) amplitude. ⋯ Activation of the DTC pathway increases cortical excitability in both naïve and post-stroke animals. These effects may underlie, at least partially, functional reorganization and therapeutic benefits associated with chronic LCN DBS in post-stroke animals.