AUTHOR COPY
Restorative Neurology and Neuroscience 30 (2012) 497–510
DOI 10.3233/RNN-2012-120227
IOS Press
497
Inter-hemispheric coupling changes associate
with motor improvements after robotic stroke
rehabilitation
G. Pellegrino
a,1,∗
, L. Tomasevic
b,1
, M. Tombini
a
, G. Assenza
a
, M. Bravi
c
, S. Sterzi
c
, V. Giacobbe
d
,
L. Zollo
d
, E. Guglielmelli
d
, G. Cavallo
d
, F. Vernieri
a
and F. Tecchio
b
a
Department of Neurology, Campus Bio-Medico University, Via A. del Portillo, Rome, Italy
b
LET’S – ISTC – CNR – Ospedale Fatebenefratelli – Via di Ponte Quattro Capi, Rome, Italy
c
Medicina Fisica e Riabilitazione – Campus Bio-Medico University, Via A. del Portillo, Rome, Italy
d
Laboratory of Biomedical Robotics and EMC – Campus Bio-Medico University, Via A. del Portillo, Rome, Italy
Abstract. Purpose: In the chronic phase of stroke brain plasticity plays a crucial role for further motor control improvements.
This study aims to assess the brain plastic reorganizations and their association with clinical progresses induced by a robot-aided
rehabilitation program in chronic stroke patients.
Methods: 7 stroke patients with an upper limb motor impairment in chronic phase underwent a multi-modal evaluation
before starting and at the end of a 12-week upper-limb neurorehabilitation program. Fugl-Meyer Assessment (FMA) Scale
scores and performance indices of hand movement performance (isometric pinch monitored through a visual feedback) were
collected. Cerebral reorganizations were characterized by 32-channel electroencephalography (EEG) focusing on ipsilesional
and contralesional resting state properties investigating both bipolar derivations overlying the middle cerebral artery territory
and the primary somatosensory sources (S1) obtained through the Functional Source Separation (FSS) method. Power Spectral
Density (PSD) and interhemispheric coherence (IHCoh) at rest were measured and correlated with clinical and hand control
robot-induced improvements.
Results: After the robotic rehabilitation we found an improvement of FMAS scores and hand motor control performance and
changes of brain connectivity in high frequency rhythms (24–90Hz). In particular, the improvement of motor performance
correlated with the modulation of the interhemispheric S1 coherence in the high beta band (24–33 Hz).
Conclusions: Recently it has been shown that an upper limb robot-based rehabilitation improves motor performance in stroke
patients. We confirm this potential and demonstrate that a robot-aided rehabilitation program induces brain reorganizations.
Specifically, interhemispheric connectivity between primary somatosensory areas got closer to a ‘physiological level’ in parallel
with the acquisition of more accurate hand control.
Keywords: Chronic stroke, robotic rehabilitation, resting state EEG, primary somatosensory hand area (S1), interhemispheric
coherence, Functional Source Separation (FSS)
1
These authors contributed equally to this work.
∗
Corresponding author: Giovanni Pellegrino, Department of
Neurology, Campus Bio-Medico University, Via A. del Portillo,
00128 Rome, Italy. Tel.: +39 06 225411286; Fax: +39 06 225411955;
E-mail: g.pellegrino@unicampus.it.
0922-6028/12/$27.50 © 2012 – IOS Press and the authors. All rights reserved