77
Views
16
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original Research

Preliminary pilot fMRI study of neuropostural optimization with a noninvasive asymmetric radioelectric brain stimulation protocol in functional dysmetria

, , &
Pages 149-154 | Published online: 04 Apr 2012

Abstract

Purpose

This study assessed changes in functional dysmetria (FD) and in brain activation observable by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during a leg flexion-extension motor task following brain stimulation with a single radioelectric asymmetric conveyer (REAC) pulse, according to the precisely defined neuropostural optimization (NPO) protocol.

Population and methods

Ten healthy volunteers were assessed using fMRI conducted during a simple motor task before and immediately after delivery of a single REAC-NPO pulse. The motor task consisted of a flexion-extension movement of the legs with the knees bent. FD signs and brain activation patterns were compared before and after REAC-NPO.

Results

A single 250-millisecond REAC-NPO treatment alleviated FD, as evidenced by patellar asymmetry during a sit-up motion, and modulated activity patterns in the brain, particularly in the cerebellum, during the performance of the motor task.

Conclusion

Activity in brain areas involved in motor control and coordination, including the cerebellum, is altered by administration of a REAC-NPO treatment and this effect is accompanied by an alleviation of FD.

Introduction

Many individuals, in the absence of organic injuries or orthopedic pathology, show a slight misalignment of body segments.Citation1,Citation2 This misalignment is associated with detectable asymmetries in the tonic and phasic activation of symmetrical muscular groups in the lower limbs that produce a stable misalignment of one’s left and right patellar marginsCitation1 during motions that are intended to be symmetrical, such as moving in a sit-up motion from a supine to a sitting position.Citation2 This phenomenon, which we call functional dysmetriaCitation3 (FD), may be related to the effects of neuropsychomotor attitude on postural control and may be the consequence of an adaptation to environmental stressCitation4Citation11 in animalsCitation12Citation14 as well as humans.Citation15Citation19 As for finger-to-nose dysmetria, FD is difficult to evaluate as an absolute measurement.Citation20 Therefore, the evaluation of FD must be made by medical experts and consists of observation of the presence or absence of FD. In assessing FD, a specific caliper specially designed for this type of evaluationCitation21 (Dismetrometro, ASMED, Florence Italy) may be used. The radioelectric asymmetric conveyer REACCitation22,Citation23 is an innovative medical device originally designed to use the effects produced by the interaction between the electromagnetic field of the human body and those produced by the instrument. REAC is an innovative technology for biostimulation and bioenhancement that uses weak radioelectric fields to modulate brain activity. REAC treatment has previously been reported to ameliorate several stress-related disorders,Citation24Citation27 depression,Citation26,Citation28,Citation29 anxiety,Citation26,Citation29 bipolar disorders,Citation30 some forms of dementia,Citation31 and impaired motor control.Citation32,Citation33 In a recent study, we examined the effects of REAC administered according to a precisely defined neuro-postural optimizationCitation3 (NPO) protocol on brain activation patterns during a finger tapping motor task. We found that changes in activity patterns in motor cerebral and cerebellar regions were evident following the REAC-NPO treatment.Citation34

The aim of the present preliminary study was to examine whether the REAC-NPO treatment that was previously shownCitation34 to affect brain activity patterns in motor regions during the aforementioned finger tapping task would affect FD evident during a lower limb motor task in which subjects are asked to perform a bilateral flexion-extension movement of the legs, bending the legs at the knees. Based on our clinical observationsCitation2,Citation3 of improvements in balance and coordination following REAC-NPO in our patients, we hypothesized that the REAC-NPO treatment would reduce FD signs in the present experimental study group.

Material and methods

Study population

Our study was designed in accordance with the Helsinki Declaration. Each participant gave signed informed consent to participate in the study, which is registered in the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trial Registry (ACTRN12611000366954). Physically active, right-handed students who regularly engaged in running were recruited to ensure a cohort of subjects in good health, particularly with respect to motor performance ability. After screening ten volunteers for FD, a total of ten healthy graduate students (six females, four males), ranging in age from 25–32 years (mean, 28 years), were confirmed by two clinicians to show FD and volunteered to participate in this study without financial compensation. FD was analyzed by two expert clinicians as volunteers moved from a supine to a sitting position on a rigid surface. This action reveals the presence of FD as a misalignment of the patella (red line in ).

Figure 1 Study design overview. (A) Initial assessment of functional dysmetria (FD). (B) Pre radio-electric asymmetric conveyer neuro-postural optimization (REAC-NPO) scans during performance of the motor task. (C) Administration of REAC-NPO. (D) Post REAC-NPO scans during performance of the motor task. (E) Post-REAC-NPO assessment of FD.

Figure 1 Study design overview. (A) Initial assessment of functional dysmetria (FD). (B) Pre radio-electric asymmetric conveyer neuro-postural optimization (REAC-NPO) scans during performance of the motor task. (C) Administration of REAC-NPO. (D) Post REAC-NPO scans during performance of the motor task. (E) Post-REAC-NPO assessment of FD.

Study design

As summarized in , the volunteers were subjected to two FD assessments and two functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scans. Before REAC-NPO, each subject was assessed for FD as described above () and then scanned while performing the alternating leg flexion-extension motor task described below (). Immediately following the scan, the subject was brought to a designated treatment room for delivery of the REAC pulse (). Forty minutes after the REAC-NPO, the subject was brought back to the magnet room and scanned while performing the alternating leg flexion-extension motor task, as described below (). Following the second scan, a post REAC-NPO assessment was performed ().

Motor task

The motor task consisted of a simple “block” of leg-bending movements with alternating flexion and extension of the knee with the subject lying in a supine position (). Within each block, there was 30 seconds of cyclical movement followed by a 30-second rest period. Each subject performed 30 blocks of the motor task during each scan.

REAC-NPO

A Convogliatore di Radianza Modulante REAC instrument (ASMED, Florence, Italy) specific for noninvasive brain stimulation techniques was used in this study. The REAC-NPO protocol used consisted of a single 250-millisecond radiofrequency burst administered at 5.8 GHz. The REAC probe is placed at the level of the scaphaCitation28,Citation32 when the radiofrequency pulse is delivered (). The REAC procedure is painless, and no adverse effects from its use have been reported. The density of the radio-electric current flowing to the subject (150 cm from the emitter) during the single radiofrequency burst is 7 μA/cm2 and the electromagnetic field surrounding the device is approximately 20 μW/m2.

Image acquisition

Brain fMRI was performed with a high-field unit (1.5 T Philips Intera NT, The Netherlands), shown in . The survey was obtained with sequences of centering axial, sagittal, and coronal planes. Volumetric sequences (with gradient echo T1 (3D TFE; TR = l3, TE = 3, FA = 30) and T2 (EPI-FFE; TR = 3000, TE = 50, FA = 90)) were oriented upon these planes. The total duration of the fMRI acquisition, conducted while the subject performed the alternating leg flexion-extension motor task, was about 40 minutes. Two radiologists who were not present for the REAC-NPO treatments performed the scans.

Image processing

Acquired DICOM images were sent to a computer running on a LINUX operating system and then exported as com pressed NIFTI files. The NIFTI files were then processed using FEAT (fMRI Expert Analysis Tool) software in the FMRIB software library (FSL). Two radiologists performed the first-level statistical analysis concurrently. Brain tissue was isolated from surrounding tissues using the Brain Extraction Tool (BET) in the FSL. The MCFLIRT Motion Correction tool was used to correct for misalignment due to subjects’ inadvertent movements using an algorithm based on the FLIRT technique of intra- and intermodal brain image registration. The output was then processed with FMRIB’s Improved Linear Modeling (FILM) tool in accordance with the block diagram of the study and taking into account the spatial parameters of the head motion detected by the MCFLIRT tool. A high-pass filter was used to remove low-frequency artifacts. The results were coregistered (ie, the different sessions were registered to each other with FLIRT).

Statistical analysis

A t-test was performed for the statistical analysis. The relative Z statistic image was designated with a Z-threshold of 4.6 to show which clusters were activated significantly (P = 0.05). The activation images were rendered with a pseudocolor scale (Z value range, 4.6–9) and then superimposed onto a standard brain template. To assess inter-subject and inter-group variance and average activation within each phase of the experiment (before and after REAC-NPO), the output of the first-level statistical analysis was processed using FMRIB’s Local Analysis of Mixed Effects algorithm, which eliminates outlier data. An arbitrary Z-threshold of 2.3 was set to enable rendering in a pseudocolor scale using a contiguous-clusters technique (significance level P = 0.05). Activation images were superimposed onto MN 1–152 standard brain atlas template images.

Results

The FD (evidenced by misalignment of the patellae during a sit-up movement) observed before REAC-NPO treatment was alleviated in all ten subjects at the time of the second, post REAC-NPO fMRI scan. That is, two expert clinicians reported that the subjects showed proper alignment of the patellae at the second scan (see ). Due to the presence of artifacts that degraded the functional images, one subject was excluded from our second-level statistical analysis. The averaged fMRI datasets from the remaining nine subjects before and after REAC-NPO are illustrated in . In particular, note that there was markedly less activation in motor cortical areas, disappearance of right thalamic activation, and reduced activation in the cerebellar vermis and pontomesencephalic regions in the post REAC-NPO averaged images () relative to the pre REAC-NPO averaged images ().

Figure 2 Average of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scans from nine subjects before (A) and after (B) radioelectric asymmetric conveyer neuro-postural optimization (REAC-NPO).

Figure 2 Average of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scans from nine subjects before (A) and after (B) radioelectric asymmetric conveyer neuro-postural optimization (REAC-NPO).

Discussion

The current study showed that a 250-millisecond REAC-NPO pulse was able to produce changes in brain activity that were apparent 40 minutes after delivery of the REAC stimulation. This observation implies there are stable changes in brain activation patterns, including activation of brain areas involved in motor control. Additionally, following the REAC-NPO treatment, we observed improved patellar symmetry when subjects were asked to perform a sit-up motion, indicating they experienced a concomitant amelioration of FD. We suggest that the presently observed reduction in FD may be due to brain activity changes enabling a more efficient motor control and motor strategy,Citation35 similar to that described following other brain stimulation techniques.Citation36 The modulation of cerebellar function is the most important finding of this study, considering the importance of the cerebellum in motor control.Citation37Citation40 Moreover, there is growing evidence implicating the cerebellum in stress-influenced affectiveCitation41 and cognitiveCitation42Citation44 functions.

Interestingly, numerous studies have related stress to various forms of dysmetria, including motor dysmetria and behavioral and cognitive dysmetria phenomena such as cognitive dysmetria,Citation45,Citation46 dysmetria of thought,Citation47Citation50 and cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome.Citation48,Citation51Citation53 These forms of dysmetria do not appear to result from any anatomical or physiological lesion, but rather seem to reflect a cerebellar dysfunction.Citation47,Citation50 Hence, FD may be the result of dysfunctional adaptive phenomena that involve the complex interrelationships between cerebellar, cerebral motor, cognitive, emotional, and behavioral functions. Since in our clinical experience the positive effects of REAC-NPO on coordination and FD tend to persist for long periods of time, even years,Citation3 we have an interest in examining the potential of REAC-NPO for remodeling cerebellar activation related to coordination and precision of movement. Additional research is needed to delineate the physiological mechanisms underlying the establishment and alleviation of FD. Furthermore, longer-term controlled studies are needed to elucidate the long-term stability of changes in the brain activation pattern and FD alleviation observed following REAC-NPO.

Conclusions

REAC-NPO may be useful to correct FD. Correction of FD may be particularly helpful in the rehabilitation of patients showing FD in addition to a motor physiological pathology, as improved coordination may facilitate recovery. Additional studies to compare the brain activities of an experimental stimulation group with those of a sham stimulation group are needed.

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank the technical staff of Diagnostic Imaging Service at Azienda Ospedaliero Universitaria in Cagliari for their assistance and Dr Francesco Sias, MD for his collaboration. The Italian Society of Neuro Psycho Physical Optimization financially supported this study.

Disclosure

Salvatore Rinaldi and Vania Fontani are the inventors of the Radio-Electric Asymmetric Conveyer.

References

  • SiqueiraCMLahoz MoyaGBCaffaroRRMisalignment of the knees: Does it affect human stance stabilityJ Bodyw Mov Ther201115223524121419366
  • Evaluation of dysfunctional patellar misalignment at the passage from the supine to the sitting position and vice versa in patients with a negative anamnesis for muscular or bone-relevant traumaAustralian New Zealand Clinical Trials Register2007 Available from: http://www.anzctr.org.au/trial_view.aspx?id=82480
  • Evaluation of the effectiveness of the Neuro Postural Optimization therapy with conveyer of modulating radiance to treat functional dysmetriaAustralian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry2008 Available from: http://www.anzctr.org.au/trial_view.aspx?id=82524
  • SchellLMJohnstonFESmithDRPaoloneAMDirectional asymmetry of body dimensions among white adolescentsAm J Phys Anthropol819856743173224061587
  • DeleonVBFluctuating asymmetry and stress in a medieval Nubian populationAm J Phys Anthropol42007132452053417243154
  • KnierimUVan DongenSForkmanBFluctuating asymmetry as an animal welfare indicator – a review of methodology and validityPhysiol Behav1022200792339842117448508
  • ParsonsPAFluctuating asymmetry: an epigenetic measure of stressBiol Rev Camb Philos Soc519906521311452190634
  • ParsonsPAFluctuating asymmetry and stress intensityTrends Ecol Evol3199053979821232332
  • LearyRFAllendorfFWFluctuating asymmetry as an indicator of stress: Implications for conservation biologyTrends Ecol Evol719894721421721227354
  • Newell-MorrisLLFahrenbruchCESackettGPPrenatal psychological stress, dermatoglyphic asymmetry and pregnancy outcome in the pigtailed macaque (Macaca nemestrina)Biol Neonate198956261752790087
  • OvchinnikovNDChanges in the interhemispheric functional asymmetry of the brain and parameters of professional reliability of operators in the process of work under high neuro-emotional stressFiziol ChelovekaMar-Apr199824274799608161
  • HoffmannKPBremmerFThieleADistlerCDirectional asymmetry of neurons in cortical areas MT and MST projecting to the NOT-DTN in macaquesJ Neurophysiol420028742113212311929929
  • AlonsoSJNavarroESantanaCRodriguezMMotor lateralization, behavioral despair and dopaminergic brain asymmetry after prenatal stressPharmacol Biochem Behav1019975824434489300604
  • McKenzieJAStress and asymmetry during arrested development of the Australian sheep blowflyProc Biol Sci122219972641389174917569447731
  • OzenerBFluctuating and directional asymmetry in young human males: effect of heavy working condition and socioeconomic statusAm J Phys Anthropol92010143111212020734438
  • LazenbyRACooperDMAngusSHallgrimssonBArticular constraint, handedness, and directional asymmetry in the human second metacarpalJ Hum Evol6200854687588518207490
  • MonkTHBuysseDJCarrierJKupferDJInducing jet-lag in older people: directional asymmetryJ Sleep Res620009210111610849237
  • SwinnenSPVangheluweSWagemansJShared neural resources between left and right interlimb coordination skills: the neural substrate of abstract motor representationsNeuroimage2120104932570258019874897
  • CarrionVGWeemsCFEliezSAttenuation of frontal asymmetry in pediatric posttraumatic stress disorderBiol Psychiatry12152001501294395111750890
  • SwaineBRSullivanSJReliability of the scores for the finger-to- nose test in adults with traumatic brain injuryPhys Ther2199373271788421720
  • A new patellar misalignment measurement device: DismetrometroAustralian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry2007 Available from: http://www.anzctr.org.au/trial_view.aspx?id=82346
  • RinaldiSFontaniVRinaldiSFontaniVRadioelectric Asymmetric Conveyer for therapeutic usePatent EP1301241 (B1)10112006 2000
  • RinaldiSFontaniVRinaldiSFontaniVRadioelectric Asymmetric Conveyer for therapeutic useUS patent 7,3338592192008 2001
  • CollodelGMorettiEFontaniVEffect of emotional stress on sperm qualityIndian J Med Res92008128325426119052335
  • RinaldiSFontaniVAravagliLMargottiMLPsychological and symptomatic stress-related disorders with radio-electric treatment: Psychometric evaluationStress Health2010265350358
  • RinaldiSFontaniVAravagliLMannuPPsychometric evaluation of a radio electric auricular treatment for stress related disorders: a double-blinded, placebo-controlled controlled pilot studyHealth Qual Life Outcomes3202010813120302662
  • MannuPRinaldiSFontaniVCastagnaARadio electric asymmetric brain stimulation in the treatment of behavioral and psychiatric symptoms in Alzheimer diseaseClin Interv Aging2011620721121822377
  • MannuPRinaldiSFontaniVCastagnaALotti MargottiMRadio electric treatment vs Es-Citalopram in the treatment of panic disorders associated with major depression: An open-label, naturalistic studyAcupuncture and Electro – Therapeutics Res Int J200934135149
  • OlivieriEBVecchiatoCIgnaccoloNRadioelectric brain stimulation in the treatment of generalized anxiety disorder with comorbid major depression in a psychiatric hospital: a pilot studyNeuropsychiatr Dis Treat2011744945521857785
  • MannuPRinaldiSFontaniVCastagnaALong-term treatment of bipolar disorder with a radioelectric asymmetric conveyorNeuropsychiatr Dis Treat2011737337921822388
  • FontaniVRinaldiSAravagliLMannuPCastagnaAMargottiMLNoninvasive radioelectric asymmetric brain stimulation in the treatment of stress-related pain and physical problems: psychometric evaluation in a randomized, single-blind placebo-controlled, naturalistic studyInt J Gen Med92220114168168622069368
  • CastagnaARinaldiSFontaniVAravagliLMannuPMargottiMLDoes osteoarthritis of the knee also have a psychogenic component? Psycho-emotional treatment with a radio-electric device vs intra- articular injection of sodium hyaluronate: An open-label, naturalistic studyAcupuncture and Electro – Therapeutics Res Int J2010351–2116
  • CastagnaARinaldiSFontaniVMannuPMargottiMLRadio electric asymmetric brain stimulation and lingual apex repositioning in patients with atypical deglutition: a naturalistic, open-label studyJ Multidiscip Healthc2011In press
  • RinaldiSFontaniVCastagnaABrain activity modif ication produced by a single radio electric asymmetric brain stimulation pulse: a new tool for neuropsychiatric treatments. Preliminary fMRI studyNeuropsychiatr Dis Treat102820117164965422090800
  • PenhuneVBZattoreRJEvansACCerebellar contributions to motor timing: a PET study of auditory and visual rhythm reproductionJ Cogn Neurosci1119981067527659831742
  • ZimermanMHummelFCNon-invasive brain stimulation: enhancing motor and cognitive functions in healthy old subjectsFront Aging Neurosci2010214921151809
  • MantoMBowerJMConfortoABConsensus paper: Roles of the cerebellum in motor control-the diversity of ideas on cerebellar involvement in movementCerebellum12132011
  • StoodleyCJSchmahmannJDEvidence for topographic organization in the cerebellum of motor control versus cognitive and affective processingCortexJul-Aug201046783184420152963
  • TeraoYStudying adaptive motor control of the cerebellum by the precision grip paradigmClin Neurophysiol112008119112419242018809354
  • HiranoTMotor control mechanism by the cerebellumCerebellum20065429630017134993
  • SchmahmannJDCaplanDCognition, emotion and the cerebellumBrain22006129Pt 229029216434422
  • TimmannDDaumICerebellar contributions to cognitive functions: a progress report after two decades of researchCerebellum20076315916217786810
  • ThachWTOn the mechanism of cerebellar contributions to cognitionCerebellum20076316316717786811
  • Della SalaSCognition and the cerebellumCortex12011471120619831
  • AndreasenNCNopoulosPO’LearyDSMillerDDWassinkTFlaumMDefining the phenotype of schizophrenia: cognitive dysmetria and its neural mechanismsBiol Psychiatry101199946790892010509174
  • FristonKDisconnection and cognitive dysmetria in schizophreniaAm J Psychiatry32005162342943215741456
  • SchmahmannJDThe role of the cerebellum in cognition and emotion: personal reflections since 1982 on the dysmetria of thought hypothesis, and its historical evolution from theory to therapyNeuropsychol Rev9201020323626020821056
  • SchmahmannJDDisorders of the cerebellum: ataxia, dysmetria of thought, and the cerebellar cognitive affective syndromeJ Neuropsychiatry Clin NeurosciSummer2004163367378
  • SchmahmannJDDysmetria of thought: clinical consequences of cerebellar dysfunction on cognition and affectTrends Cogn Sci9119982936237121227233
  • AndreasenNCO’LearyDSCizadloTSchizophrenia and cognitive dysmetria: a positron-emission tomography study of dysfunctional prefrontal-thalamic-cerebellar circuitryProc Natl Acad Sci U S A9319969318998599908790444
  • PartridgeJRaynerJAwanSThe cerebellar cognitive affective syndromeBr J Hosp Med (Lond)122010711271271321135772
  • WolfURapoportMJSchweizerTAEvaluating the affective component of the cerebellar cognitive affective syndromeJ Neuropsychiatry Clin NeurosciSummer2009213245253
  • MantoMMechanisms of human cerebellar dysmetria: experimental evidence and current conceptual basesJ Neuroeng Rehabil200961019364396