Cortical activation characteristics during different swallowing tasks in post-stroke patients: a functional near-infrared spectroscopy study
Meng Guo, You Tang, Wenjing Liu, Yuxuan Zhang, Zihao Sun, Chunxiao Wan

TL;DR
This study used brain imaging to compare how stroke patients with and without swallowing difficulties activate different brain regions during swallowing tasks.
Contribution
The study reveals how post-stroke dysphagia affects cortical activation patterns during swallowing tasks using fNIRS.
Findings
Post-stroke dysphagia patients showed compensatory hyperactivation in motor regions during simple swallowing tasks.
Non-dysphagic patients exhibited widespread and coordinated brain activation that increased with task complexity.
Dysphagia patients had limited cortical modulation during demanding dual-task swallowing tests compared to controls.
Abstract
This study employed functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) to investigate cortical activation patterns in post-stroke dysphagia (PSD) patients compared with non-dysphagic patients during specific swallowing tasks. Twenty-nine patients with supratentorial stroke were recruited and divided into a dysphagic group (n = 14) and a control group (n = 15). Brain activity was monitored using fNIRS during single swallowing task (SST), continuous swallowing task (CST), and video-continuous swallowing dual-task test (DTT). Activation patterns were analyzed within and between groups using the general linear model (GLM) and block-average hemodynamic analysis. In the dysphagia group, during the SST, activation was observed in the R-FPA, bilateral PSMC, and L-DLPFC (p < 0.05). During the CST, activation was observed in the R-PSMC (p < 0.05), while during the DTT, activation was limited to the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDysphagia Assessment and Management · Cerebral Palsy and Movement Disorders · Stroke Rehabilitation and Recovery
