Abstract

BackgroundMotor impairment is a significant health concern among post-stroke patients. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is considered as an emerging rehabilitation therapy for various neurological conditions, and the effects of excitatory TMS on post-stroke have received much attention in past decade. However, the future hotspots and content analysis on the growth trends have not been studied. This bibliometric and content analysis aimed to study the global developmental history and current status of TMS for motor function of post-stroke from January 2004 to July 2023. MethodsLiterature published on Scopus database from January 2004 to July 2023 were searched. Extracted data was analysed using the R studio and VOS viewer for author's publication, institutions, sources, keyword co-occurrence and world network analysis. Keyword cluster analysis, co-citation analysis for references and content analysis were also performed. We screened top 10 most cited or collaborative areas for publications, institutions and sources in the field of TMS associated with motor function of post-stroke. ResultsIn this study, a comprehensive analysis of 267 publications was conducted, revealing a substantial surge in research output throughout 2022. China emerged as the leading contributor, with 409 publications, followed by the United States with 211 publications. Notably, Harvard Medical School stood out as one of the most prolific institutions, accounting for 34 publications (13.12 %). Among researchers, Abo M garnered the highest publication count, with 9 articles (14.5 %). The Word cloud showed that motor function, repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) and upper limb have been the focus of recent attention. Burst keywords on thematic evolution and topic trend shows that quality of life scale, network parameters, cognition, lower limb motor function are the future trends. ConclusionThis bibliometric study describes that TMS has shown promising results in improving motor function of upper extremity in stroke patients, the long-term effects and durability of these improvements are still being investigated. Future research might focus on understanding the optimal duration and frequency of TMS sessions for sustained motor recovery and exploring strategies to maintain gains achieved through TMS over extended periods of time. Future studies can investigate the changes in the lower limb motor function.

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