Neuroscience insights improve neurorehabilitation of poststroke aphasia

被引:121
作者
Berthier, Marcelo L. [1 ]
Pulvermueller, Friedemann [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Malaga, Unit Cognit Neurol & Aphasia, Ctr Invest Medicosanitarias CIMES, Malaga 29010, Spain
[2] MRC Cognit & Brain Sci Unit CBU, Cambridge CB2 7EF, England
基金
英国医学研究理事会;
关键词
INDUCED LANGUAGE THERAPY; CONSTRAINT-INDUCED APHASIA; TRANSCRANIAL MAGNETIC STIMULATION; INDUCED MOVEMENT THERAPY; INFERIOR FRONTAL GYRUS; DOUBLE-BLIND; BROMOCRIPTINE TREATMENT; CEREBRAL-ISCHEMIA; BRAIN; RECOVERY;
D O I
10.1038/nrneurol.2010.201
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
The treatment of aphasias-acquired language disorders-caused by stroke and other neurological conditions has benefitted from insights from neuroscience and neuropsychology. Hebbian mechanisms suggest that massed practice and exploitation of residual neurological capacities can aid neurorehabilitation of patients with poststroke aphasia, and progress in basic neuroscience research indicates that the language system of the human brain is functionally interwoven with perceptual and motor systems. Intensive speech and language therapies, including constraint-induced aphasia therapy, that activate both the linguistic and concordant motor circuits utilize the knowledge gained from these advances in neuroscience research and can lead to surprisingly rapid improvements in language performance, even in patients with chronic aphasia. Drug-based therapies alone and in conjunction with behavioral language therapies also increase language performance in patients with aphasia. Furthermore, noninvasive transcranial magnetic stimulation and electrical stimulation techniques that target neuronal activity within perilesional areas might help patients with aphasia to regain lost language functions. Intensive language-action therapies that lead to rapid improvements in language skills might provide a new opportunity for investigating fast plastic neuronal changes in the areas of the brain associated with language processing. Here, we review progress in basic neuroscience research and its translational impact on the neurorehabilitation of language disorders after stroke.
引用
收藏
页码:86 / 97
页数:12
相关论文
共 157 条
  • [1] PHARMACOTHERAPY FOR APHASIA
    ALBERT, ML
    BACHMAN, DL
    MORGAN, A
    HELMESTABROOKS, N
    [J]. NEUROLOGY, 1988, 38 (06) : 877 - 879
  • [2] A randomized, double-blind trial of bromocriptine efficacy in nonfluent aphasia after stroke
    Ashtary, F
    Janghorbani, M
    Chitsaz, A
    Reisi, M
    Bahrami, A
    [J]. NEUROLOGY, 2006, 66 (06) : 914 - 916
  • [3] THRESHOLDS IN CEREBRAL-ISCHEMIA - THE ISCHEMIC PENUMBRA
    ASTRUP, J
    SIESJO, BK
    SYMON, L
    [J]. STROKE, 1981, 12 (06) : 723 - 725
  • [4] THE EFFICACY OF FUNCTIONAL COMMUNICATION THERAPY FOR CHRONIC APHASIC PATIENTS
    ATEN, JL
    CALIGIURI, MP
    HOLLAND, AL
    [J]. JOURNAL OF SPEECH AND HEARING DISORDERS, 1982, 47 (01): : 93 - 96
  • [5] Selective impairment of verb processing associated with pathological changes in Brodmann areas 44 and 45 in the motor neurone disease-dementia-aphasia syndrome
    Bak, TH
    O'Donovan, DG
    Xuereb, JH
    Boniface, S
    Hodges, JR
    [J]. BRAIN, 2001, 124 : 103 - 120
  • [6] Using Transcranial Direct-Current Stimulation to Treat Stroke Patients With Aphasia
    Baker, Julie M.
    Rorden, Chris
    Fridriksson, Julius
    [J]. STROKE, 2010, 41 (06) : 1229 - 1236
  • [7] A prospective, randomized, parallel group, controlled study of the effect of intensity of speech and language therapy on early recovery from poststroke aphasia
    Bakheit, A. M. O.
    Shaw, S.
    Barrett, L.
    Wood, J.
    Carrington, S.
    Griffiths, S.
    Searle, K.
    Koutsi, F.
    [J]. CLINICAL REHABILITATION, 2007, 21 (10) : 885 - 894
  • [8] Bakheit A M O, 2004, Expert Rev Neurother, V4, P211, DOI 10.1586/14737175.4.2.211
  • [9] The effects of amphetamine on recovery of function in animal models of cerebral injury: A critical appraisal
    Barbay, Scott
    Nudo, Randolph J.
    [J]. NEUROREHABILITATION, 2009, 25 (01) : 5 - 17
  • [10] Amantadine for adynamic speech - Possible benefit for aphasia?
    Barrett, Anna M.
    Eslinger, Paul J.
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL MEDICINE & REHABILITATION, 2007, 86 (08) : 605 - 612