Enhanced locomotor adaptation aftereffect in the "broken escalator" phenomenon using anodal tDCS

Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolynErthygladolygiad gan gymheiriaid

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Enhanced locomotor adaptation aftereffect in the "broken escalator" phenomenon using anodal tDCS. / Kaski, Diego; Patel, Mitesh; Quadir, Shamim et al.
Yn: Journal of Neurophysiology, 01.05.2012.

Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolynErthygladolygiad gan gymheiriaid

HarvardHarvard

Kaski, D, Patel, M, Quadir, S, Youssif, N & Bronstein, AM 2012, 'Enhanced locomotor adaptation aftereffect in the "broken escalator" phenomenon using anodal tDCS', Journal of Neurophysiology.

APA

Kaski, D., Patel, M., Quadir, S., Youssif, N., & Bronstein, A. M. (2012). Enhanced locomotor adaptation aftereffect in the "broken escalator" phenomenon using anodal tDCS. Journal of Neurophysiology.

CBE

Kaski D, Patel M, Quadir S, Youssif N, Bronstein AM. 2012. Enhanced locomotor adaptation aftereffect in the "broken escalator" phenomenon using anodal tDCS. Journal of Neurophysiology.

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Kaski D, Patel M, Quadir S, Youssif N, Bronstein AM. Enhanced locomotor adaptation aftereffect in the "broken escalator" phenomenon using anodal tDCS. Journal of Neurophysiology. 2012 Mai 1.

Author

Kaski, Diego ; Patel, Mitesh ; Quadir, Shamim et al. / Enhanced locomotor adaptation aftereffect in the "broken escalator" phenomenon using anodal tDCS. Yn: Journal of Neurophysiology. 2012.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Enhanced locomotor adaptation aftereffect in the "broken escalator" phenomenon using anodal tDCS

AU - Kaski, Diego

AU - Patel, Mitesh

AU - Quadir, Shamim

AU - Youssif, Nada

AU - Bronstein, Adolfo M

PY - 2012/5/1

Y1 - 2012/5/1

N2 - The everyday experience of stepping onto a stationary escalator causes a stumble, despite our full awareness that the escalator is broken. In the laboratory, this “broken escalator” phenomenon is reproduced when subjects step onto an obviously stationary platform (AFTER trials) that was previously experienced as moving (MOVING trials) and attests to a process of motor adaptation. Given the critical role of M1 in upper limb motor adaptation and the potential for transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) to increase cortical excitability, we hypothesized that anodal tDCS over leg M1 and premotor cortices would increase the size and duration of the locomotor aftereffect. Thirty healthy volunteers received either sham or real tDCS (anodal bihemispheric tDCS; 2 mA for 15 min at rest) to induce excitatory effects over the primary motor and premotor cortex before walking onto the moving platform. The real tDCS group, compared with sham, displayed larger trunk sway and increased gait velocity in the first AFTER trial and a persistence of the trunk sway aftereffect into the second AFTER trial. We also used transcranial magnetic stimulation to probe changes in cortical leg excitability using different electrode montages and eyeblink conditioning, before and after tDCS, as well as simulating the current flow of tDCS on the human brain using a computational model of these different tDCS montages. Our data show that anodal tDCS induces excitability changes in lower limb motor cortex with resultant enhancement of locomotor adaptation aftereffects. These findings might encourage the use of tDCS over leg motor and premotor regions to improve locomotor control in patients with neurological gait disorders.

AB - The everyday experience of stepping onto a stationary escalator causes a stumble, despite our full awareness that the escalator is broken. In the laboratory, this “broken escalator” phenomenon is reproduced when subjects step onto an obviously stationary platform (AFTER trials) that was previously experienced as moving (MOVING trials) and attests to a process of motor adaptation. Given the critical role of M1 in upper limb motor adaptation and the potential for transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) to increase cortical excitability, we hypothesized that anodal tDCS over leg M1 and premotor cortices would increase the size and duration of the locomotor aftereffect. Thirty healthy volunteers received either sham or real tDCS (anodal bihemispheric tDCS; 2 mA for 15 min at rest) to induce excitatory effects over the primary motor and premotor cortex before walking onto the moving platform. The real tDCS group, compared with sham, displayed larger trunk sway and increased gait velocity in the first AFTER trial and a persistence of the trunk sway aftereffect into the second AFTER trial. We also used transcranial magnetic stimulation to probe changes in cortical leg excitability using different electrode montages and eyeblink conditioning, before and after tDCS, as well as simulating the current flow of tDCS on the human brain using a computational model of these different tDCS montages. Our data show that anodal tDCS induces excitability changes in lower limb motor cortex with resultant enhancement of locomotor adaptation aftereffects. These findings might encourage the use of tDCS over leg motor and premotor regions to improve locomotor control in patients with neurological gait disorders.

M3 - Article

JO - Journal of Neurophysiology

JF - Journal of Neurophysiology

SN - 0022-3077

ER -