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A long-lasting improvement of tactile extinction after galvanic vestibular stimulation: Two Sham-stimulation controlled case studies
Ist Teil von
Neuropsychologia, 2011, Vol.49 (2), p.186-195
Ort / Verlag
Kidlington: Elsevier Ltd
Erscheinungsjahr
2011
Quelle
MEDLINE
Beschreibungen/Notizen
▶ Tactile extinction is frequent and often persistent after brain damage. ▶ Two sessions of galvanic-vestibular stimulation (GVS) permanently reduced left-sided tactile extinction in 2 chronic patients with right-brain lesions. ▶ GVS improves bodily awareness on the contralesional side in extinction.
Sensory extinction is frequent and often persistent after brain damage. Previous studies have shown the transient influence of sensory stimulation on tactile extinction. In the present two case studies we investigated whether subliminal galvanic vestibular stimulation (GVS) modulates tactile extinction. GVS induces polarity-specific changes in cerebral excitability in the vestibular cortices and adjacent cortical areas in the temporo-parietal cortex via polarization of the vestibular nerves. Two patients (DL, CJ) with left-sided tactile extinction due to chronic (5 vs. 6 (1/2) years lesion age) right-hemisphere lesions (right fronto-parietal in DL, right frontal and discrete parietal in CJ) were examined. Both showed normal tactile sensitivity to light touch and yielded 90–100% correct identifications in unilateral tactile stimulations for both hands. In Baseline investigations without GVS and Sham-GVS both showed stable left-sided tactile extinction rates of 40–55% (DL) and 49–72% (CJ). In contrast, one session of right-cathodal GVS (intensity: 0.6
mA, duration: 20
min) permanently improved tactile identification of
identical stimuli, while a second session with left-cathodal GVS significantly reduced left-sided extinction rates for
different stimuli in DL. Patient CJ's left-sided tactile extinction was significantly improved by left-cathodal GVS (0.5
mA, 20
min) for
different stimuli, while right-cathodal GVS induced a significant reduction for
identical materials. In contrast, Sham-stimulation was ineffective. Improvements remained stable for at least 1 year (DL) resp. 3 weeks (CJ). Control experiments ruled out improvements in tactile extinction merely by retesting. In conclusion, chronic tactile extinction may be permanently improved by GVS in a polarity-specific way.