Abstract

We examined the effectiveness of a 2-week regimen of a semantic feature training in combination with transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) for progressive naming impairment associated with primary progressive aphasia (N = 4) or early onset Alzheimer’s Disease (N = 1). Patients received a 2-week regimen (10 sessions) of anodal tDCS delivered over the left temporoparietal cortex while completing a language therapy that consisted of repeated naming and semantic feature generation. Therapy targets consisted of familiar people, household items, clothes, foods, places, hygiene implements, and activities. Untrained items from each semantic category provided item level controls. We analyzed naming accuracies at multiple timepoints (i.e., pre-, post-, 6-month follow-up) via a mixed effects logistic regression and individual differences in treatment responsiveness using a series of non-parametric McNemar tests. Patients showed advantages for naming trained over untrained items. These gains were evident immediately post tDCS. Trained items also showed a shallower rate of decline over 6-months relative to untrained items that showed continued progressive decline. Patients tolerated stimulation well, and sustained improvements in naming accuracy suggest that the current intervention approach is viable. Future implementation of a sham control condition will be crucial toward ascertaining whether neurostimulation and behavioral treatment act synergistically or alternatively whether treatment gains are exclusively attributable to either tDCS or the behavioral intervention.

Highlights

  • IntroductionMultifactorial construct that involves the precise orchestration of numerous functions (e.g., syntax, semantics, morphology, phonology)

  • Language is a complex, multifactorial construct that involves the precise orchestration of numerous functions

  • We focused on treatment of progressive anomia associated with a semantically based naming impairment – progressive anomia – in a cohort of patients with fluent variant of progressive aphasia (PPA) or Alzheimer’s Disease (AD)

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Summary

Introduction

Multifactorial construct that involves the precise orchestration of numerous functions (e.g., syntax, semantics, morphology, phonology). The most common etiologies that produce PPA include frontotemporal degeneration or Alzheimer’s Disease (Mesulam et al, 2008; Grossman, 2010; Harciarek and Kertesz, 2011). In both of these neuropathologies, abnormal protein depositions result in neuronal dropout and macroscale atrophy within cortical regions that are critical for producing and/or perceiving language. When disease processes compromise the left hemisphere perisylvian language network, people typically experience a range of cognitivelinguistic impairments (Newhart et al, 2007; Grossman et al, 2013; Henry et al, 2016)

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