Abstract

Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation is a popular noninvasive brain stimulation (NIBS) technique that modulates brain excitability by means of low-amplitude electrical current (usually <4mA) delivered to the electrodes on the scalp. The NIBS research has gained significant momentum in the past decade, prompting tDCS as an adjunctive therapeutic tool for neuromuscular disorders like stroke. However, due to stroke lesions and the differences in individual neuroanatomy, the targeted brain region may not show the same response upon NIBS across stroke patients. To this end, we conducted a study to test the feasibility of targeted NIBS. The hand motor hotspot (HMH) for each chronic stroke participant was identified using Neuronavigated Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS). After identifying the HMH as the neural target site, we applied High-definition TDCS with the current delivered at 2mA for 20 minutes. To simulate the effects of HD-tDCS in the brain, especially with stroke lesions, we used the computational modeling tool (ROAST). The lesion mask was identified using an automated tool (LINDA). This paper demonstrates that the stroke lesions can be incorporated in the computational modeling of electric field distribution upon HD-tDCS without manual intervention.

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