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Kinesthetic Illusion Induced by Visual Stimulation Influences Sensorimotor Event-related Desynchronization in Stroke Patients with Severe Upper-limb Paralysis: A Pilot Study

Overview
Publisher Sage Publications
Specialty Neurology
Date 2020 Dec 16
PMID 33325415
Citations 4
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Abstract

Background: Repetition of motor imagery improves the motor function of patients with stroke. However, patients who develop severe upper-limb paralysis after chronic stroke often have an impaired ability to induce motor imagery. We have developed a method to passively induce kinesthetic perception using visual stimulation (kinesthetic illusion induced by visual stimulation [KINVIS]).

Objective: This pilot study further investigated the effectiveness of KINVIS in improving the induction of kinesthetic motor imagery in patients with severe upper-limb paralysis after stroke.

Methods: Twenty participants (11 with right hemiplegia and 9 with left hemiplegia; mean time from onset [±standard deviation], 67.0±57.2 months) with severe upper-limb paralysis who could not extend their paretic fingers were included in this study. The ability to induce motor imagery was evaluated using the event-related desynchronization (ERD) recorded during motor imagery before and after the application of KINVIS for 20 min. The alpha- and beta-band ERDs around the premotor, primary sensorimotor, and posterior parietal cortices of the affected and unaffected hemispheres were evaluated during kinesthetic motor imagery of finger extension and before and after the intervention.

Results: Beta-band ERD recorded from the affected hemisphere around the sensorimotor area showed a significant increase after the intervention, while the other ERDs remained unchanged.

Conclusions: In patients with chronic stroke who were unable to extend their paretic fingers for a prolonged period of time, the application of KINVIS, which evokes kinesthetic perception, improved their ability to induce motor imagery. Our findings suggest that although KINVIS is a passive intervention, its short-term application can induce changes related to the motor output system.

Citing Articles

Effects and Adaptation of Visual-Motor Illusion Using Different Visual Stimuli on Improving Ankle Joint Paralysis of Stroke Survivors-A Randomized Crossover Controlled Trial.

Tanabe J, Amimoto K, Sakai K, Osaki S, Yoshihiro N, Kataoka T Brain Sci. 2022; 12(9).

PMID: 36138985 PMC: 9496978. DOI: 10.3390/brainsci12091249.


Model-Based Analyses for the Causal Relationship Between Post-stroke Impairments and Functional Brain Connectivity Regarding the Effects of Kinesthetic Illusion Therapy Combined With Conventional Exercise.

Miyawaki Y, Yoneta M, Okawada M, Kawakami M, Liu M, Kaneko F Front Syst Neurosci. 2022; 15:804263.

PMID: 35173590 PMC: 8842648. DOI: 10.3389/fnsys.2021.804263.


Influence of Visual Stimulation-Induced Passive Reproduction of Motor Images in the Brain on Motor Paralysis After Stroke.

Aoyama T, Kanazawa A, Kohno Y, Watanabe S, Tomita K, Kaneko F Front Hum Neurosci. 2021; 15:674139.

PMID: 34239429 PMC: 8258409. DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2021.674139.


Effects of visual-motor illusion on functional connectivity during motor imagery.

Sakai K, Goto K, Tanabe J, Amimoto K, Kumai K, Kamio H Exp Brain Res. 2021; 239(7):2261-2271.

PMID: 34081177 DOI: 10.1007/s00221-021-06136-2.