Oscillatory neurofeedback networks and poststroke rehabilitative potential in severely impaired stroke patients

Neuroimage Clin. 2023:37:103289. doi: 10.1016/j.nicl.2022.103289. Epub 2022 Dec 14.

Abstract

Motor restoration after severe stroke is often limited. However, some of the severely impaired stroke patients may still have a rehabilitative potential. Biomarkers that identify these patients are sparse. Eighteen severely impaired chronic stroke patients with a lack of volitional finger extension participated in an EEG study. During sixty-six trials of kinesthetic motor imagery, a brain-machine interface turned event-related beta-band desynchronization of the ipsilesional sensorimotor cortex into opening of the paralyzed hand by a robotic orthosis. A subgroup of eight patients participated in a subsequent four-week rehabilitation training. Changes of the movement extent were captured with sensors which objectively quantified even discrete improvements of wrist movement. Albeit with the same motor impairment level, patients could be differentiated into two groups, i.e., with and without task-related increase of bilateral cortico-cortical phase synchronization between frontal/premotor and parietal areas. This fronto-parietal integration (FPI) was associated with a significantly higher volitional beta modulation range in the ipsilesional sensorimotor cortex. Following the four-week training, patients with FPI showed significantly higher improvement in wrist movement than those without FPI. Moreover, only the former group improved significantly in the upper extremity Fugl-Meyer-Assessment score. Neurofeedback-related long-range oscillatory coherence may differentiate severely impaired stroke patients with regard to their rehabilitative potential, a finding that needs to be confirmed in larger patient cohorts.

Keywords: Brain-computer interface; Brain-robot interface; Long-range connectivity; Motor restoration; Neurorehabilitation; Phase synchronization.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Imagery, Psychotherapy
  • Neurofeedback*
  • Sensorimotor Cortex*
  • Stroke Rehabilitation*
  • Stroke* / complications