Many stroke survivors experience aphasia, a loss or impairment of language affecting the production or understanding of speech. One common type of aphasia is known as non-fluent aphasia. Patients with non-fluent aphasia have difficulty formulating grammatical sentences, often producing short word fragments despite having a good understanding of what others are trying to communicate to them. Speech language pathologists (SLPs) play a central role rehabilitating persons with aphasia and administer therapy in an attempt to improve communication skills. Despite standard therapy, approximately 50% of individuals who experience aphasia acutely continue to have language deficits more than 6 months post-stroke. In most people, Broca's area is dominant in the left side of the brain. Following a left-sided stroke, the right-sided homologue of Broca's area (the pars triangularis), may adopt language function. Unfortunately, reorganizing language to the right side of the brain seems to be less effective than restoring function to the left hemisphere. Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS), a form of non-invasive brain stimulation, can be used to suppress activity of specific regions in the right side of the brain to promote recovery of function in the perilesional area. Despite preliminary success in existing studies using rTMS in post-stroke aphasia, there is much work to be done to better understand the mechanisms underlying recovery. Responses to rTMS have been positive, yet heterogenous, which may be related to timing of treatments following stroke.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
20
20 minutes of 1Hz (1200 pulses) repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) applied by Magstim Rapid 2 stimulator equipped with an airfilm figure-8 coil
Participants receive 3.5 hours of intensive speech therapy in small groups delivered by a blinded speech language pathologist and therapy assistant. The objective of M-MAT is to improve word production through shaping of responses (ie. Gradually increasing complexity of spoken targets towards eventual mastery) and social-mediated repetitive practice. Therapists use game-based interactive tasks and rich multi-modal cueing (gestures, written words, drawing, reading words) to improve spoken production and oral communication.
20 minutes of 1Hz (1200 pulses) repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) applied by Magstim Rapid 2 stimulator equipped with an airfilm figure-8 sham coil.
Foothills Medical Centre
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Change from baseline on the Boston Naming Test within one week of intervention completion
Number of spontaneously produced correct responses to a series of line drawings. That is, the number of correctly named images.
Time frame: Baseline, within 1 week of completing the 10 day intervention
Change from baseline on the Boston Naming Test at 3 months
Number of spontaneously produced correct responses to a series of line drawings. That is, the number of correctly named images.
Time frame: Baseline and 3-month follow-up
Trained and Untrained Picture Naming
Number of correctly named pictures from a set of trained nouns, trained verbs, untrained nouns, and untrained verbs
Time frame: Baseline, within 1 week of completing the 10 day intervention and 3-month follow-up
Story Narrative Task
Retelling of the Cinderella task as a measure of discourse, performance is quantified by number of correct information units.
Time frame: Baseline, within 1 week of completing the 10 day intervention and 3-month follow-up
Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9)
A 9-item questionnaire completed by a caregiver to quickly assess depressive symptoms. The scale ranges from 0 to 27 with higher scores indicating greater endorsement of depressive symptoms.
Time frame: Baseline, within 1 week of completing the 10 day intervention and 3-month follow-up
EuroQoL-5D-5L
Assesses mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain/discomfort and anxiety/depression. The answers given can be converted into EQ-5D index with scores anchored at 0 for death and 1 for perfect health. The EQ-5D also records the patient's self-rated health on a vertical visual analogue scale ranging from 0 to 100 with higher scores indicating higher self-perceived quality of life. This can be used as a quantitative measure of health outcome that reflects the patient's own judgement.
Time frame: Baseline, within 1 week of completing the 10 day intervention and 3-month follow-up
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