Effects of anodal tDCS and occupational therapy on fine motor skill deficits in patients with chronic stroke
No Thumbnail
Authors
Ilić, Nela V.Dubljanin-Raspopović, Emilija
Nedeljković, Una
Tomanovic-Vujadinović, Sanja
Milanović, Slađan

Petronic-Marković, Ivana
Ilić, Tihomir V.

Article (Published version)

Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background: A growing body of evidence supports the effectiveness of using transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) in patients with chronic hand motor impairment resulting from stroke. Objective: In this study, we investigate and compare the combined effects of anodal tDCS and occupational therapy (OT) to sham stimulation with OT (control) on fine motor skill deficits of chronic stroke patients. Methods: A total of 26 stroke patients (at gt = 9 months) were randomly assigned to an active treatment or a control group in a double-blinded, sham-controlled, parallel design study. Each group received OT for 45 min/day (10 sessions for 2 weeks). Treatment was preceded by either 20 minutes of 2mA anodal tDCS over ipsilesional M1 or sham tDCS. A modified Jebsen-Taylor Hand Function Test (mJTHFT) was administered as primary outcome measure, and handgrip dynamometer and upper limb Fugl-Meyer (ULFM) assessments were performed as secondary outcomes. The assessment was done at baseline (T0)..., after the interventions on day 1(T1), day 10 (T2) and day 40 (T3). Results: We observed a statistically significant effect in the tDCS group when the results were compared to the sham group. The mJTHFT times were significantly shorter immediately after treatment and at day 40. The intervention had no effect on handgrip strength or ULFM score. Conclusion: Fine motor skill deficits in chronic stroke survivors can be improved when intensive OT is primed with anodal tDCS over the ipsilesional hemisphere.
Keywords:
Stroke recovery / rehabilitation / non-invasive brain stimulation / transcranial direct current stimulation / occupational therapySource:
Restorative Neurology & Neuroscience, 2016, 34, 6, 935-945Publisher:
- Ios Press, Amsterdam
Funding / projects:
- Ministry of Defence of the Republic of Serbia [MFVMA/07/16-18]
- Cellular and molecular basis of neuroinflamation: potential targets for translational medicine and therapy (RS-41014)
- Noninvasive modulation of cortical excitability and plasticity - Noninvasive neuromodulation of the CNS in the study of physiological mechanisms, diagnosis and treatment (RS-175012)
DOI: 10.3233/RNN-160668
ISSN: 0922-6028
PubMed: 27689551
WoS: 000389243100006
Scopus: 2-s2.0-84999652756
Collections
Institution/Community
Institut za medicinska istraživanjaTY - JOUR AU - Ilić, Nela V. AU - Dubljanin-Raspopović, Emilija AU - Nedeljković, Una AU - Tomanovic-Vujadinović, Sanja AU - Milanović, Slađan AU - Petronic-Marković, Ivana AU - Ilić, Tihomir V. PY - 2016 UR - http://rimi.imi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/711 AB - Background: A growing body of evidence supports the effectiveness of using transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) in patients with chronic hand motor impairment resulting from stroke. Objective: In this study, we investigate and compare the combined effects of anodal tDCS and occupational therapy (OT) to sham stimulation with OT (control) on fine motor skill deficits of chronic stroke patients. Methods: A total of 26 stroke patients (at gt = 9 months) were randomly assigned to an active treatment or a control group in a double-blinded, sham-controlled, parallel design study. Each group received OT for 45 min/day (10 sessions for 2 weeks). Treatment was preceded by either 20 minutes of 2mA anodal tDCS over ipsilesional M1 or sham tDCS. A modified Jebsen-Taylor Hand Function Test (mJTHFT) was administered as primary outcome measure, and handgrip dynamometer and upper limb Fugl-Meyer (ULFM) assessments were performed as secondary outcomes. The assessment was done at baseline (T0), after the interventions on day 1(T1), day 10 (T2) and day 40 (T3). Results: We observed a statistically significant effect in the tDCS group when the results were compared to the sham group. The mJTHFT times were significantly shorter immediately after treatment and at day 40. The intervention had no effect on handgrip strength or ULFM score. Conclusion: Fine motor skill deficits in chronic stroke survivors can be improved when intensive OT is primed with anodal tDCS over the ipsilesional hemisphere. PB - Ios Press, Amsterdam T2 - Restorative Neurology & Neuroscience T1 - Effects of anodal tDCS and occupational therapy on fine motor skill deficits in patients with chronic stroke EP - 945 IS - 6 SP - 935 VL - 34 DO - 10.3233/RNN-160668 UR - conv_3928 ER -
@article{ author = "Ilić, Nela V. and Dubljanin-Raspopović, Emilija and Nedeljković, Una and Tomanovic-Vujadinović, Sanja and Milanović, Slađan and Petronic-Marković, Ivana and Ilić, Tihomir V.", year = "2016", abstract = "Background: A growing body of evidence supports the effectiveness of using transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) in patients with chronic hand motor impairment resulting from stroke. Objective: In this study, we investigate and compare the combined effects of anodal tDCS and occupational therapy (OT) to sham stimulation with OT (control) on fine motor skill deficits of chronic stroke patients. Methods: A total of 26 stroke patients (at gt = 9 months) were randomly assigned to an active treatment or a control group in a double-blinded, sham-controlled, parallel design study. Each group received OT for 45 min/day (10 sessions for 2 weeks). Treatment was preceded by either 20 minutes of 2mA anodal tDCS over ipsilesional M1 or sham tDCS. A modified Jebsen-Taylor Hand Function Test (mJTHFT) was administered as primary outcome measure, and handgrip dynamometer and upper limb Fugl-Meyer (ULFM) assessments were performed as secondary outcomes. The assessment was done at baseline (T0), after the interventions on day 1(T1), day 10 (T2) and day 40 (T3). Results: We observed a statistically significant effect in the tDCS group when the results were compared to the sham group. The mJTHFT times were significantly shorter immediately after treatment and at day 40. The intervention had no effect on handgrip strength or ULFM score. Conclusion: Fine motor skill deficits in chronic stroke survivors can be improved when intensive OT is primed with anodal tDCS over the ipsilesional hemisphere.", publisher = "Ios Press, Amsterdam", journal = "Restorative Neurology & Neuroscience", title = "Effects of anodal tDCS and occupational therapy on fine motor skill deficits in patients with chronic stroke", pages = "945-935", number = "6", volume = "34", doi = "10.3233/RNN-160668", url = "conv_3928" }
Ilić, N. V., Dubljanin-Raspopović, E., Nedeljković, U., Tomanovic-Vujadinović, S., Milanović, S., Petronic-Marković, I.,& Ilić, T. V.. (2016). Effects of anodal tDCS and occupational therapy on fine motor skill deficits in patients with chronic stroke. in Restorative Neurology & Neuroscience Ios Press, Amsterdam., 34(6), 935-945. https://doi.org/10.3233/RNN-160668 conv_3928
Ilić NV, Dubljanin-Raspopović E, Nedeljković U, Tomanovic-Vujadinović S, Milanović S, Petronic-Marković I, Ilić TV. Effects of anodal tDCS and occupational therapy on fine motor skill deficits in patients with chronic stroke. in Restorative Neurology & Neuroscience. 2016;34(6):935-945. doi:10.3233/RNN-160668 conv_3928 .
Ilić, Nela V., Dubljanin-Raspopović, Emilija, Nedeljković, Una, Tomanovic-Vujadinović, Sanja, Milanović, Slađan, Petronic-Marković, Ivana, Ilić, Tihomir V., "Effects of anodal tDCS and occupational therapy on fine motor skill deficits in patients with chronic stroke" in Restorative Neurology & Neuroscience, 34, no. 6 (2016):935-945, https://doi.org/10.3233/RNN-160668 ., conv_3928 .