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Brain activity during real-time walking and with walking interventions after stroke: a systematic review

Journal

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12984-020-00797-w

Keywords

Stroke; Brain imaging; Gait; fNIRS; EEG; FDG-PET; Rehabilitation

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research Foundation Grant [FDN 143340]
  2. University of British Columbia (Four-Year Fellowship)
  3. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (Allied Health Professional Fellowship)
  4. Vanier Graduate Scholarship program
  5. Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research
  6. Canada Research Chairs Program

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Investigations into real-time brain activations during walking post-stroke have shown differences in brain activation compared to healthy individuals, with different components of gait leading to different brain activations. Asymmetrical activations during gait were closely related to performance asymmetry, while hyperactivations often decreased with walking interventions and improved walking performance.
Investigations of real-time brain activations during walking have become increasingly important to aid in recovery of walking after a stroke. Individual brain activation patterns can be a valuable biomarker of neuroplasticity during the rehabilitation process and can result in improved personalized medicine for rehabilitation. The purpose of this systematic review is to explore the brain activation characteristics during walking post-stroke by determining: (1) if different components of gait (i.e., initiation/acceleration, steady-state, complex) result in different brain activations, (2) whether brain activations differ from healthy individuals. Six databases were searched resulting in 22 studies. Initiation/acceleration showed bilateral activation in frontal areas; steady-state and complex walking showed broad activations with the majority exploring and finding increases in frontal regions and some studies also showing increases in parietal activation. Asymmetrical activations were often related to performance asymmetry and were more common in studies with slower gait speed. Hyperactivations and asymmetrical activations commonly decreased with walking interventions and as walking performance improved. Hyperactivations often persisted in individuals who had experienced severe strokes. Only a third of the studies included comparisons to a healthy group: individuals post-stroke employed greater brain activation compared to young adults, while comparisons to older adults were less clear and limited. Current literature suggests some indicators of walking recovery however future studies investigating more brain regions and comparisons with healthy age-matched adults are needed to further understand the effect of stroke on walking-related brain activation.

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