Background: The Action Observation Therapy (AOT) is a well-established post-stroke rehabilitation treatment based on the theoretical framework of the Mirror Neuron System (MNS) activation. However, AOT protocols are still heterogeneous in terms of video contents of observed actions. Objective: The aim of this study was to analyze electroencephalographic (EEG) recordings in stroke patients during the observation of different videos of task-specific upper limb movements, and to define which category of actions can elicit a stronger cortical activation in the observer’s brain. Methods: Signals were analyzed from 19 chronic stroke subjects observing customized videos that represented 3 different categories of upper limb actions: Finalized Actions, Non-Finalized Actions, and Control Videos. The Event-Related Desynchronization in the µ and β bands was chosen to identify the involvement of the cerebral cortex: the area of the normalized power spectral density was calculated for each category and, deepening, for the reaching and completion sub-phases of Finalized Actions. For descriptive purposes, the time course of averaged signal power was described. The Kruskal–Wallis test (P <.05) was applied. Results: The analysis showed a greater desynchronization when subjects observed Finalized Actions with respect to Non-Finalized in all recorded areas; Control videos provoked a synchronization in the same areas and frequency bands. The reaching phase of feeding and self-care actions evoked a greater suppression both in µ and β bands. Conclusions: The observation of finalized arm movements seems to elicit the strongest activation of the MNS in chronic stroke patients. This finding may help the clinicians to design future AOT-based stroke rehabilitation protocols. Clinical Trial Registration: Clinical Trial Registration—URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT04047134.

The reaching phase of feeding and self-care actions optimizes action observation effects in chronic stroke subjects / Franceschini, M.; Ottaviani, M.; Romano, P.; Goffredo, M.; Pournajaf, S.; Lofrumento, M.; Proietti, S.; Sterpi, I.; Tricomi, E.; Tropea, P.; Corbo, M.; Fadiga, L.; Infarinato, F.. - In: NEUROREHABILITATION AND NEURAL REPAIR. - ISSN 1545-9683. - 36:9(2022), pp. 574-586. [10.1177/15459683221110884]

The reaching phase of feeding and self-care actions optimizes action observation effects in chronic stroke subjects

Ottaviani M.
;
Fadiga L.;Infarinato F.
2022

Abstract

Background: The Action Observation Therapy (AOT) is a well-established post-stroke rehabilitation treatment based on the theoretical framework of the Mirror Neuron System (MNS) activation. However, AOT protocols are still heterogeneous in terms of video contents of observed actions. Objective: The aim of this study was to analyze electroencephalographic (EEG) recordings in stroke patients during the observation of different videos of task-specific upper limb movements, and to define which category of actions can elicit a stronger cortical activation in the observer’s brain. Methods: Signals were analyzed from 19 chronic stroke subjects observing customized videos that represented 3 different categories of upper limb actions: Finalized Actions, Non-Finalized Actions, and Control Videos. The Event-Related Desynchronization in the µ and β bands was chosen to identify the involvement of the cerebral cortex: the area of the normalized power spectral density was calculated for each category and, deepening, for the reaching and completion sub-phases of Finalized Actions. For descriptive purposes, the time course of averaged signal power was described. The Kruskal–Wallis test (P <.05) was applied. Results: The analysis showed a greater desynchronization when subjects observed Finalized Actions with respect to Non-Finalized in all recorded areas; Control videos provoked a synchronization in the same areas and frequency bands. The reaching phase of feeding and self-care actions evoked a greater suppression both in µ and β bands. Conclusions: The observation of finalized arm movements seems to elicit the strongest activation of the MNS in chronic stroke patients. This finding may help the clinicians to design future AOT-based stroke rehabilitation protocols. Clinical Trial Registration: Clinical Trial Registration—URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT04047134.
2022
AOT; EEG; rehabilitation; stroke
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
The reaching phase of feeding and self-care actions optimizes action observation effects in chronic stroke subjects / Franceschini, M.; Ottaviani, M.; Romano, P.; Goffredo, M.; Pournajaf, S.; Lofrumento, M.; Proietti, S.; Sterpi, I.; Tricomi, E.; Tropea, P.; Corbo, M.; Fadiga, L.; Infarinato, F.. - In: NEUROREHABILITATION AND NEURAL REPAIR. - ISSN 1545-9683. - 36:9(2022), pp. 574-586. [10.1177/15459683221110884]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1672938
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