Noninvasive neuromodulatory effect on cognition in individuals with traumatic brain injury: A single-blinded, two-arm parallel randomized clinical trial.

IF 1.1 4区 医学 Q3 REHABILITATION
Kavita Kaushik, Nidhi Sharma, Parveen Kumar, Simranjeet Kaur, Gaurav Kapoor, Ajay Gehlot
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objectives: The study aimed to compare the effect of cranial electrical stimulation (CES) and transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) in improving cognition among individuals with mild traumatic brain injury.

Patients and methods: The pretest-posttest randomized controlled study was conducted between November 2020 and March 2022. Seventy-two patients (64 males, 8 females; mean age: 40.5±9.5 years; range, 18 to 45 years) experiencing cognitive impairment within three months of traumatic brain injury were recruited. Participants were randomly assigned into two groups: Group 1 (CES with cognitive training, n=36) and Group 2 (tDCS with cognitive training, n=36). Participants were blinded in the study. Both groups received 30-min sessions of neuromodulation along with 30 min of cognitive training five days a week for four weeks. The patients were assessed at baseline and at the end of two and four weeks of intervention. The primary outcome measure was the Montreal Cognition Assessment (MoCA), and the secondary outcome measure was the Galveston Orientation Amnesia Test (GOAT).

Results: Demographic and baseline characteristics depicted normal distribution for both groups (p>0.05). Within group analyses of both groups demonstrated significant differences for both outcome measures (MoCA: p=0.001; GOAT: p=0.001). Between group analyses of MoCA showed significant improvement with p-value of 0.001 while GOAT exhibited p-value of 0.002 showing significant difference between the two groups. Time group interaction effect and covariance analyses depicted significant improvement with p-value of 0.001 for both outcome measures with excellent effect size >0.80.

Conclusion: Cranial electrical stimulation was a more effective noninvasive neuromodulatory device than tDCS in improving cognition among individuals with traumatic brain injury.

无创神经调节对脑外伤患者认知能力的影响:单盲双臂平行随机临床试验。
研究目的研究旨在比较颅脑电刺激(CES)和经颅直流电刺激(tDCS)在改善轻度脑外伤患者认知能力方面的效果:这项前测-后测随机对照研究于 2020 年 11 月至 2022 年 3 月间进行。研究招募了72名在脑外伤后三个月内出现认知障碍的患者(64名男性,8名女性;平均年龄:40.5±9.5岁;范围:18至45岁)。参与者被随机分为两组:第一组(CES 与认知训练,36 人)和第二组(tDCS 与认知训练,36 人)。参与者在研究中均为盲人。两组患者均接受 30 分钟的神经调控治疗,同时每周五天接受 30 分钟的认知训练,为期四周。患者分别在基线、两周和四周干预结束时接受评估。主要结果指标是蒙特利尔认知评估(MoCA),次要结果指标是加尔维斯顿定向遗忘测试(GOAT):两组的人口统计学特征和基线特征均呈正态分布(P>0.05)。两组的组内分析表明,两项结果测量均存在显著差异(MoCA:p=0.001;GOAT:p=0.001)。MoCA 的组间分析表明,两组间存在显著差异,P 值为 0.001,而 GOAT 的 P 值为 0.002。时间组交互效应和协方差分析显示,两组结果均有明显改善,P值均为0.001,效应大小均大于0.80:在改善脑外伤患者的认知能力方面,颅电刺激是一种比 tDCS 更有效的非侵入性神经调节设备。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Turkish Journal of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
Turkish Journal of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Health Professions-Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The Turkish Journal of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (Formerly published as Türkiye Fiziksel Tıp ve Rehabilitasyon Dergisi) is the official journal of the Turkish Society of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. The journal is an international open-access, double-blind peer-reviewed periodical journal bringing the latest developments in all aspects of physical medicine and rehabilitation, and related fields. The journal publishes original articles, review articles, editorials, case reports (limited), letters to the editors. The target readership includes academic members, specialists, residents working in the fields of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. The language of the journal is English and it is published quarterly (in March, June, September, and December).
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