Objective
Pilot testing of real time functional magnetic resonance imaging (rt-fMRI) and real time functional near infrared spectroscopy (rt-fNIRS) as brain computer interface (BCI) neural feedback systems combined with motor learning for motor recovery in chronic severely impaired stroke survivors.
Approach
We enrolled a four-case series and administered three sequential rt-fMRI and ten rt-fNIRS neural feedback sessions interleaved with motor learning sessions. Measures were: Arm Motor Assessment Tool, functional domain (AMAT-F; 13 complex functional tasks), Fugl-Meyer arm coordination scale (FM); active wrist extension range of motion (ROM); volume of activation (fMRI); and fNIRS HbO concentration. Performance during neural feedback was assessed, in part, using percent successful brain modulations during rt-fNIRS.
Main results
Pre-/post-treatment mean clinically significant improvement in AMAT-F (.49 ± 0.22) and FM (10.0 ± 3.3); active wrist ROM improvement ranged from 20° to 50°. Baseline to follow-up change in brain signal was as follows: fMRI volume of activation was reduced in almost all ROIs for three subjects, and for one subject there was an increase or no change; fNIRS HbO was within normal range, except for one subject who increased beyond normal at post-treatment. During rt-fNIRS neural feedback training, there was successful brain signal modulation (42%–78%).
Significance
Severely impaired stroke survivors successfully engaged in spatially focused BCI systems, rt-fMRI and rt-fNIRS, to clinically significantly improve motor function. At the least, equivalency in motor recovery was demonstrated with prior long-duration motor learning studies (without neural feedback), indicating that no loss of motor improvement resulted from substituting neural feedback sessions for motor learning sessions. Given that the current neural feedback protocol did not prevent the motor improvements observed in other long duration studies, even in the presence of fewer sessions of motor learning in the current work, the results support further study of neural feedback and its potential for recovery of motor function in stroke survivors. In future work, expanding the sophistication of either or both rt-fMRI and rt-fNIRS could hold the potential for further reducing the number of hours of training needed and/or the degree of recovery.
ClinicalTrials.gov ID: NCT02856035.
This study provides evidence of HIV-related associations between alcohol use and indicators of axonal integrity loss along the ATR, a frontal pathway involved in the inhibition of addictive or unwanted behaviors. Reduced axonal integrity of this pathway was greatest in HIV+ participants with an AUD, even when considering the effect of age-adjusted disease length and severity (nadir CD4). This finding implicates a potential biological mechanism linking reduced integrity of frontal white matter to the high prevalence of AUD in an HIV+ population without dementia or hepatitis C.
Objective: Disrupted sleep is common following combat deployment. Contributors to risk include posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI); however, the mechanisms linking PTSD, mTBI, and sleep are unclear. Both PTSD and mTBI affect frontolimbic white matter tracts, such as the uncinate fasciculus. The current study examined the relationship between PTSD symptom presentation, lateralized uncinate fasciculus integrity, and sleep quality. Method: Participants include 42 combat veterans with and without PTSD and mTBI. Freesurfer and Tracula were used to establish specific white matter ROI integrity via 3-T MRI. The Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index and PTSD Checklist were used to assess sleep quality and PTSD symptoms. Results: Decreased fractional anisotropy in the right uncinate fasciculus (β = −1.11, SE = 0.47, p < .05) and increased hyperarousal symptom severity (β = 3.50, SE = 0.86, p < .001) were associated with poorer sleep quality. Conclusion: Both right uncinate integrity and hyperarousal symptom severity are associated withsleep quality in combat veterans. The right uncinate is a key regulator of limbic behavior and sympathetic nervous system reactivity, a core component of hyperarousal. Damage to this pathway may be one mechanism by which mTBI and/or PTSD could create vulnerability for sleep problems following combat deployment.
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