Abstract

The present study aimed to investigate the long-term effects of gait intervention with transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) synchronized with gait cycle frequency on the cortical control of muscle activity during gait, using coherence analyses, in patients after stroke. Eight chronic post-stroke patients participated in a single-blinded crossover study, and 7 patients completed the long-term intervention. Each patient received tACS over the primary motor cortex foot area on the affected side, which was synchronized with individual gait cycle frequency, and sham stimulation during treadmill gait in a random order. Electrical neuromuscular stimulation was used to assist the paretic ankle movement in both conditions. After gait intervention with tACS, beta band (15−35 Hz) coherence, which is considered to have a cortical origin, significantly increased in the paretic tibialis anterior (TA) muscle during 6-min of over-ground gait. The change in beta band coherence in the paretic TA muscle was positively correlated with the change in gait distance. These results indicate that gait intervention with tACS synchronized with gait cycle frequency may induce gait-specific plasticity that modulates the common neural drive to the TA motoneurons on the paretic side during gait and leads to changes in gait function in patients after stroke.

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