Impact of transcranial direct current stimulation on fatigue in multiple sclerosis.

Category Primary study
JournalRestorative neurology and neuroscience
Year 2014
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PURPOSE:

Fatigue is a frequent and difficult to treat symptom affecting patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) with a profound negative impact on quality of life. Fatigue has been associated with functional and structural abnormalities of the frontal cortex, including frontal hypo-activation. The aim of this exploratory study was to assess whether fatigue symptoms can be reduced by excitability-enhancing anodal transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS).

METHODS:

In this sham-controlled, double-blind intervention study, tDCS was applied over the left prefrontal cortex of MS patients with fatigue for five consecutive days. Symptoms were tracked for 1 month via questionnaires. Lesion load at baseline was calculated for each patient and correlated with fatigue levels and responsiveness to stimulation.

RESULTS:

In the whole group analysis the scores of the fatigue scales were not altered by tDCS. However, in an exploratory analysis we found a correlation between response to the stimulation regarding subjectively perceived fatigue and lesion load in the left frontal cortex: patients responding positively to anodal tDCS had higher lesion load, compared to non-responding patients.

CONCLUSION:

We conclude that in patient subgroups discernible by specific morphological alterations, tDCS may be a tool for MS fatigue management.
Epistemonikos ID: 49364ede7d32e7f31219290e7433cec0326ec275
First added on: May 06, 2018