This study will investigate the effects of mild electrical stimulation in conjunction with speech therapy for people with post-stroke aphasia to enhance language recovery.
Aphasia is a disturbance of language, primarily caused by brain injury to the left cerebral hemisphere. Aphasia treatments include speech and language therapy and pharmacologic therapy, but several studies have found that these treatments are not completely effective for patients with aphasia, leaving them with residual deficits that significantly add to the cost of stroke-related care. Additionally, the amount and frequency of speech and language therapy delivered may have a critical effect on recovery. Therefore, there is a need for new treatments or adjuncts to existing treatments, such as brain stimulation interventions, that have the potential to show greater improvements in patients with aphasia. One such new approach for non-invasive brain stimulation is transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS). This study will examine the effects of tDCS during speech therapy to further examine which method or methods is best for patient recovery. Patients enrolled in the study will undergo language testing that covers a broad range of language functions. Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) will be completed before and after speech therapy intervention arms to investigate the neural processes affected by tDCS and speech therapy. Study design: Patients will be randomly assigned to one of 2 speech therapy groups as well as randomly assigned to one of 2 stimulation groups (active anodal stimulation or sham). Patients will receive one of two different speech therapy treatment interventions to focus on specific processing deficits. Participants will undergo neuropsychological evaluation and fMRI assessment before receiving targeted anodal-tDCS or sham-tDCS for 10 therapy sessions. Participants will then be re-tested using the behavioral assessment measure and fMRI before crossing over to receive the tDCS intervention again, along with the same speech therapy arm. They will complete a behavioral assessment and fMRI at 3 months post Treatment 2 and a final behavioral assessment at 6 months post Treatment 2.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
200
High-Definition-tDCS will be delivered via a battery-driven constant direct current stimulator (Soterix) using a 4x1 montage (1 central anodal electrode and 4 cathodal electrodes) arranged in a HD-cap. Anodal or sham tDCS will be administered.
Participants will receive either semantic or phonological focused speech therapy
Medical College of Wisconsin
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States
RECRUITINGBehavioral outcome
Percent improvement on behavioral outcomes after each therapy cycle will be the primary behavioral outcome measure.
Time frame: Upon the completion of therapy cycle (a cycle consists of 10 intervention days) and 10 weeks post completion of therapy
fMRI
fMRI functional changes between time points
Time frame: 3 time points: pre-assessment, 10 weeks post-therapy cycle A and 10 weeks post-therapy cycle B
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