Abstract

We aimed to enhance the performance of naming and sentence production in chronic post-stroke aphasia by tablet-based language training combined with transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) conducted on non-consecutive days. We applied a deblocking method involved in stimulation–facilitation therapy to six participants with chronic aphasia who performed naming and sentence production tasks for impaired modalities, immediately after a spoken-word picture-matching task for an intact modality. The participants took part in two conditional sessions: a tDCS condition in which they performed a spoken word-picture matching task while we delivered an anodal tDCS over the left inferior frontal cortex; and a sham condition in which sham stimulation was delivered. We hypothesized that, compared with the sham stimulation, the application of anodal tDCS over the left inferior frontal cortex during the performance of tasks requiring access to semantic representations would enhance the deblocking effect, thereby improving the performances for subsequent naming and sentence production. Our results showed greater improvements 2 weeks after training with tDCS than those after training with sham stimulation. The accuracy rate of naming was significantly higher in the tDCS condition than in the sham condition, regardless of whether the words were trained or not. Also, we found a significant improvement in the production of related words and sentences for the untrained words in the tDCS condition, compared with that found pre-training, while in the sham condition we found no significant improvement compared with that found pre-training. These results support our hypothesis and suggest the effectiveness of the use of tDCS during language training on non-consecutive days.

Highlights

  • Aphasia is an impairment in language function resulting from brain damage mainly by left-hemispheric stroke

  • We aimed to investigate whether the performance of naming and sentence production in chronic post-stroke aphasias could be enhanced by facilitation training combined with anodal transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) over the left inferior frontal cortex, conducted on non-consecutive days, compared with non-use of tDCS

  • We found a significant improvement in the production of related words and sentences for the untrained words in the tDCS condition, compared to that in pretraining, while in the sham condition there was no significant difference from pre-training

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Summary

Introduction

Aphasia is an impairment in language function resulting from brain damage mainly by left-hemispheric stroke. While speech-language therapy plays a central role in improving the function of patients with aphasia, the improvement is mild at the chronic stage. The use of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS), a neuromodulation technique, has been proposed tDCS Enhanced Aphasic Training to be effective in improving function in chronic aphasia (see review Shah et al, 2013; Flöel, 2014). The guidelines on the therapeutic use of tDCS published in 2017 (Lefaucheur et al, 2017) demonstrated the absence of sufficient evidence for the effect on chronic stage post-stroke aphasia, Stahl et al (2019) recently proposed a Phase III protocol of intensive speech–language therapy combined with tDCS. The future clinical use of tDCS for aphasia is anticipated

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