ABSTRACT
Objective
Explore the feasibility, tolerability, and early efficacy of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) as a therapeutic intervention for youth with cognitive persistent post-concussion symptoms (PPCS).
Hypothesis
tDCS improves performance on a dual task working memory (WM) paradigm in youth with cognitive PPCS.
Participants
Twelve youth experiencing cognitive PPCS.
Design
A quasi-randomized pilot trial was used to explore the tolerability of, and performance differences on, a dual N-Back WM task paired with active or sham tDCS over 3 sessions.
Measures
Accuracy and reaction time on WM task and self-report of tDCS tolerability.
Results
Trends toward increases in accuracy from Day 1 to 3 seen in both groups. Active tDCS group performed better than sham on Day 2 in N-Back level N2 (p = .019), and marginally better than the sham group on Day 3 in level N3 (p = .26). Participants reported tDCS as tolerable; compared to the active tDCS group, the sham group reported more “considerable” (p = .078) and “strong” symptoms (p = .097).
Conclusion
tDCS is a promising tool for enhancing WM performance and is a feasible and tolerable adjunct to behavioral interventions in youth with cognitive PPCS. A clinical trial to demonstrate efficacy is warranted.
Acknowledgments
The authors thank Nicolas Iuorio for assistance with coding throughout the development of the dual-task paradigm, and Shrika Vejandla for assistance with data analysis and visualization.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).