Abstract

Motor imagery of movements is used as mental strategy in neurofeedback applications to gain voluntary control over activity in motor areas of the brain. In the present functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study, we first addressed the question whether motor imagery and execution of swallowing activate comparable brain areas, which has been already proven for hand and foot movements. Prior near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) studies provide evidence that this is the case in the outer layer of the cortex. With the present fMRI study, we want to expand these prior NIRS findings to the whole brain. Second, we used motor imagery of swallowing as mental strategy during visual neurofeedback to investigate whether one can learn to modulate voluntarily activity in brain regions, which are associated with active swallowing, using real-time fMRI. Eleven healthy adults performed one offline session, in which they executed swallowing movements and imagined swallowing on command during fMRI scanning. Based on this functional localizer task, we identified brain areas active during both tasks and defined individually regions for feedback. During the second session, participants performed two real-time fMRI neurofeedback runs (each run comprised 10 motor imagery trials), in which they should increase voluntarily the activity in the left precentral gyrus by means of motor imagery of swallowing while receiving visual feedback (the visual feedback depicted one’s own fMRI signal changes in real-time). Motor execution and imagery of swallowing activated a comparable network of brain areas including the bilateral pre- and postcentral gyrus, inferior frontal gyrus, basal ganglia, insula, SMA, and the cerebellum compared to a resting condition. During neurofeedback training, participants were able to increase the activity in the feedback region (left lateral precentral gyrus) but also in other brain regions, which are generally active during swallowing, compared to the motor imagery offline task. Our results indicate that motor imagery of swallowing is an adequate mental strategy to activate the swallowing network of the whole brain, which might be useful for future treatments of swallowing disorders.

Highlights

  • Swallowing is a complex motor behavior that requires voluntary movements as well as involuntary reflexes [1]

  • To examine brain activation patterns during motor execution (ME) and motor imagery (MI) of swallowing, we contrasted both conditions with the resting condition

  • We performed a real-time functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) NF training in which healthy individuals were instructed to increase the activity in brain regions, which are involved in active swallowing, while imagining swallowing movements

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Summary

Introduction

Swallowing is a complex motor behavior that requires voluntary movements as well as involuntary reflexes [1]. Traditional therapeutic approaches to treat symptoms of dysphagia include the modification of food or fluid consistency, external stimulation (e.g., massage and electrical stimulation) of oral and pharyngeal structures, feeding assistance, mealtime supervision, tube feeding, or parenteral nutrition [13,14,15]. It remains unclear whether neurologic patients who managed to use these techniques fare better than those receiving no specific dysphagia therapy and compliance to treatment is generally low [13]

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