Abstract

Ischemic stroke of the middle cerebral artery (MCA), a major brain vessel that supplies the primary motor and premotor cortex, is one of the most common causes for severe upper limb impairment. Currently available motor rehabilitation training largely lacks satisfying efficacy with over 70% of stroke survivors showing residual upper limb dysfunction. Motor imagery-based functional magnetic resonance imaging neurofeedback (fMRI-NF) has been suggested as a potential therapeutic technique to improve motor impairment in stroke survivors. In this preregistered proof-of-concept study (https://osf.io/y69jc/), we translated graded fMRI-NF training, a new paradigm that we have previously studied in healthy participants, to first-time MCA stroke survivors with residual mild to severe impairment of upper limb motor function. Neurofeedback was provided from the supplementary motor area (SMA) targeting two different neurofeedback target levels (low and high). We hypothesized that MCA stroke survivors will show (1) sustained SMA-region of interest (ROI) activation and (2) a difference in SMA-ROI activation between low and high neurofeedback conditions during graded fMRI-NF training. At the group level, we found only anecdotal evidence for these preregistered hypotheses. At the individual level, we found anecdotal to moderate evidence for the absence of the hypothesized graded effect for most subjects. These null findings are relevant for future attempts to employ fMRI-NF training in stroke survivors. The study introduces a Bayesian sequential sampling plan, which incorporates prior knowledge, yielding higher sensitivity. The sampling plan was preregistered together with a priori hypotheses and all planned analysis before data collection to address potential publication/researcher biases. Unforeseen difficulties in the translation of our paradigm to a clinical setting required some deviations from the preregistered protocol. We explicitly detail these changes, discuss the accompanied additional challenges that can arise in clinical neurofeedback studies, and formulate recommendations for how these can be addressed. Taken together, this work provides new insights about the feasibility of motor imagery-based graded fMRI-NF training in MCA stroke survivors and serves as a first example for comprehensive study preregistration of an (fMRI) neurofeedback experiment.

Highlights

  • Ischemic stroke of the middle cerebral artery (MCA) is one of the most common forms of stroke (Leys et al, 1992; Aouad et al, 2013)

  • MCA stroke often leads to severe upper limb impairment and compromises patients’ quality of life (Miller et al, 2010; Langhorne et al, 2011)

  • This remaining limb dysfunction presents a major impediment to rehabilitation, activities of daily living and occupational prospects of stroke survivors, and has a considerable, negative effect on their wellbeing (Langhorne et al, 2011; Pollock et al, 2014)

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Summary

Introduction

Ischemic stroke of the middle cerebral artery (MCA) is one of the most common forms of stroke (Leys et al, 1992; Aouad et al, 2013). It is estimated that only 5–20% of patients with hemiparesis regain full upper limb function, while 33–60% do not show any recovery 6 months after stroke (Kwakkel and Kollen, 2013). This remaining limb dysfunction presents a major impediment to rehabilitation, activities of daily living and occupational prospects of stroke survivors, and has a considerable, negative effect on their wellbeing (Langhorne et al, 2011; Pollock et al, 2014). There is a need for new noninvasive therapies to promote recovery of motor function in general and in particular for the upper limb after MCA stroke

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