Authors

  1. Bender Pape, Theresa L. DrPH, MA, CCC-SLP/L
  2. Herrold, Amy A. PhD
  3. Livengood, Sherri L. PhD
  4. Guernon, Ann PhD, MS, CCC-SLP/L
  5. Weaver, Jennifer A. MA, OTR/L, CBIS
  6. Higgins, James P. BA
  7. Rosenow, Joshua M. MD, FACS
  8. Walsh, Elyse DPT, PT, NCS
  9. Bhaumik, Runa PhD
  10. Pacheco, Marilyn MD
  11. Patil, Vijaya K. MD
  12. Kletzel, Sandra PhD
  13. Conneely, Mark MD
  14. Bhaumik, Dulal K. PhD
  15. Mallinson, Trudy PhD, OTR/L, FAOTA, FACRM
  16. Parrish, Todd PhD

Abstract

Objective: Report pilot findings of neurobehavioral gains and network changes observed in persons with disordered consciousness (DoC) who received repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) or amantadine (AMA), and then rTMS+AMA.

 

Participants: Four persons with DoC 1 to 15 years after traumatic brain injury (TBI).

 

Design: Alternate treatment-order, within-subject, baseline-controlled trial.

 

Main Measures: For group and individual neurobehavioral analyses, predetermined thresholds, based on mixed linear-effects models and conditional minimally detectable change, were used to define meaningful neurobehavioral change for the Disorders of Consciousness Scale-25 (DOCS) total and Auditory-Language measures. Resting-state functional connectivity (rsFC) of the default mode and 6 other networks was examined.

 

Results: Meaningful gains in DOCS total measures were observed for 75% of treatment segments and auditory-language gains were observed after rTMS, which doubled when rTMS preceded rTMS+AMA. Neurobehavioral changes were reflected in rsFC for language, salience, and sensorimotor networks. Between networks interactions were modulated, globally, after all treatments.

 

Conclusions: For persons with DoC 1 to 15 years after TBI, meaningful neurobehavioral gains were observed after provision of rTMS, AMA, and rTMS+AMA. Sequencing and combining of treatments to modulate broad-scale neural activity, via differing mechanisms, merits investigation in a future study powered to determine efficacy of this approach to enabling neurobehavioral recovery.