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Bimanual Skill Learning after Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation in Children with Unilateral Cerebral Palsy: A Brief Report

PUBLICATION: 
Case Report
Authors: 
Samuel T. Nemanich, Tonya L. Rich, Andrew M. Gordon, Kathleen M. Friel & Bernadette T. Gillick
Year Published: 
2019
Publisher: 
Dev Neurorehabil. 2019 Oct;22(7):504-508. doi: 10.1080/17518423.2019.1600065. Epub 2019 Apr 3.
Identifiers: 
PMID: 30943373
Abstract on PubMed

Abstract

Bimanual skills are important for goal-oriented activities. Children with unilateral cerebral palsy (UCP) have deficits in unimanual and bimanual motor control and learning. The application of non-invasive brain stimulation with existing motor training may further promote motor learning; however, the effects of stimulation on bimanual learning have not been examined. Here, we assessed the performance of a novel bimanual skill (modified Speed Stacks task) in eight children with UCP before, during, and after a combined motor training and brain stimulation intervention. Participants received 10 days (120 min/day) of goal-oriented bimanual therapy combined initially with transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS, 20 min/day). Results showed task improvement tapered (p < 0.001) during and after the intervention and task variability decreased in 6/8 participants, indicating the potential impact of novel rehabilitation to improve skill learning in children with UCP. Future work is required to understand how both tDCS and bimanual training contribute to learning bimanual tasks.

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Conditions & Recovery

Cerebral Palsy icon
Worldwide, over 24 million children and adults are living with CP.
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Write and walk again.