Cerebrovascular Accident Clinical Trial
This study will examine in healthy individuals and in patients with aphasia (a language
disturbance that is usually caused by stroke, brain disease, or injury) which parts of the
brain are involved in naming everyday objects. In most people, language and speech originate
in the left side of the brain. When this side of the brain is damaged, language function is
often impaired. Often, however, function partly recovers, possibly because the right half of
the brain takes over some language functions when the left half is injured.
Healthy volunteers and patients with aphasia due to stroke may be eligible for this study.
All candidates must be 18 years of age and older. Patients' aphasia must have occurred as
the result of a stroke that occurred more than 12 months before entering the study. In
addition, their stroke must not have affected the brainstem or cerebellum. Candidates will
be screened with a medical history, brief physical examination, and questionnaire about
handedness. Participants will undergo the following tests and procedures:
Session 1: Magnetic resonance scanning (MRI)
MRI is a diagnostic and research tool that uses a strong magnetic field and radio waves to
obtain images of body organs and tissues, including the brain. The subject lies in a
cylindrical machine for up to 60 minutes. Loud thumping noises occur when the radiofrequency
circuits are switched; this noise can be muffled by the use of earplugs.
Sessions 2 and 3: Picture naming during transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS)
For transcranial magnetic stimulation, a wire coil is held on the subject's scalp. A brief
electrical current is passed through the coil, creating a magnetic pulse that stimulates the
brain. The subject hears a click and feels a pulling sensation on the skin under the coil.
There may also be a twitch in the muscles of the arm or leg. During the TMS, subjects are
asked to name pictures of common everyday objects that appear on a computer screen. They are
asked to name them as fast and as accurately as possible. Their voice is recorded to
determine the accuracy of their answers and the time it takes to answer. Subjects may also
be asked to tense certain muscles slightly or perform other simple actions during the TMS to
position the coil properly.
Background: Aphasia, a language impairment usually induced by stroke, is typically the
result of damage to the left hemisphere. Severity of this disorder can vary across patients,
as well as the degree of impairment at various levels of linguistic processes. However, one
consistent symptom of aphasia is anomia (or dysnomia) which is a word finding deficit. Given
the reliable presence of anomia, picture naming is a common task used both clinically and
experimentally to probe linguistic processing.
Functional imaging studies have suggested that the right hemisphere may be recruited to
compensate for loss of left hemispheric language regions. However, they could not assess the
functional significance of the observed activations. In a previous experiment (NIDCD
protocol 92-DC-0178), we have identified the areas activated in association with language
function (picture naming) in patients with chronic stroke that have partially recovered from
an initially severe aphasia and in healthy, age- and gender-matched controls. The
preliminary outcome is increased involvement of the right hemisphere for picture naming in
recovered aphasics.
Objectives: In the present protocol, we plan to test the hypothesis that right hemispheric
homologues of traditional left hemispheric anterior and posterior language areas are the
neural substrate mediating recovery of language functions in patients with chronic stroke.
This investigation is important because it can provide novel evidence on plasticity of
language functions in chronic stroke.
Study Population: We plan to include chronic stroke patients that suffer from aphasia, and
healthy, age- and gender-matched controls.
Design: We will test if inhibitory transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) of
right-hemispheric cortical areas (inferior frontal gyrus - IFG, superior temporal gyrus -
STG, middle temporal gyrus - MTG) that are activated during picture naming will result in a
decrease in task performance (picture naming latency) in chronic stroke patients, in
comparison to stimulation of left hemispheric areas in aphasics, and right-hemispheric
homologue areas in healthy controls. The TMS experiment is necessary to identify a
cause-effect link between right hemispheric activation and recovery of language functions
after chronic stroke. Stereotactic applications of TMS during the picture naming task will
be implemented over six cortical sites in both groups: left IFG, left STG, left MTG, and
right IFG, right STG, and right MTG.
Outcome Measures: The outcome measure will be performance on the picture naming task
(primary outcome measure reaction time) during TMS as a function of subject group and
stimulation site.
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N/A
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