言語障害に対する新たな治療アプローチが有望(Novel treatment approach for language disorder shows promise)

ad

2025-04-15 アリゾナ大学

アリゾナ大学の研究チームは、進行性言語障害(PPA)に対する新たな治療法を開発しました。この方法は、従来の言語療法に経頭蓋直流電気刺激(tDCS)を組み合わせるもので、脳の言語処理領域に微弱な電流を流すことで神経可塑性を促進し、言語機能の改善を図ります。研究では、12名のPPA患者を対象に、tDCSを併用した言語療法とプラセボ刺激を併用した言語療法を比較しました。その結果、tDCSを併用した群では、文法的に正確で意味のある文章の生成やスペルミスの減少など、より顕著で持続的な改善が見られました。この治療法は、安全で低コスト、かつ臨床現場への導入が容易であることから、PPA患者の生活の質向上に寄与することが期待されます。

<関連情報>

行動介入と経頭蓋直流刺激による原発性進行性失語症の音韻障害への対応 Addressing Phonological Deficit in Primary Progressive Aphasia With Behavioral Intervention and Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation

Katlyn Nickels, Pélagie M. Beeson, and Aneta Kielar
Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research  Published:14 April 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1044/2024_JSLHR-24-00250

Abstract

Purpose:
Despite recognition of the underlying phonological impairment observed in the logopenic and nonfluent variants of primary progressive aphasia (PPA), there is relatively little treatment research directed toward strengthening phonological skills. In this study, we focused on remediating phonological deficits in logopenic and nonfluent PPA. Specifically, we hypothesized that behavioral intervention intended to strengthen phonological manipulation skills and sound–letter correspondences—coupled with transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS)—would improve language abilities, especially in the written modality.

Method:
Twelve individuals with logopenic or nonfluent variants of PPA and 24 neurotypical adults completed neuropsychological assessment that documented spoken and written language deficits in those with PPA. Phonological skills were consistently impaired in relation to other language processes. Following a double-blind, crossover design, six individuals with PPA were randomized to receive active tDCS with phonological intervention during the first treatment phase, and after a 2-month break, they received a second phase of behavioral intervention paired with sham tDCS. The other six individuals were randomized to receive sham first and active tDCS second. Language skills were evaluated before and after each treatment phase and 2 months after the intervention.

Results:
Both treatment groups (tDCS-first and sham-first) made significant improvement in phonological transcoding skills in response to behavioral intervention, but those who received active tDCS first showed stronger gains in phonological manipulation ability. This group also showed positive changes in written narratives, which contained more grammatical sentences with increased meaningful content and more accurate spelling.

Conclusions:
These data provide compelling evidence supporting an approach that targets phonological deficits in logopenic and nonfluent PPA. Specifically, we found that improved phonological skills resulted in better functional communication ability (text-level writing) relevant to everyday life. Positive outcomes were strongest when tDCS was combined with behavioral treatment from the beginning, suggesting that this combination may potentiate positive changes that extend beyond the initial stimulation period.

Supplemental Material:
https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.28598195

医療・健康
ad
ad
Follow
ad
タイトルとURLをコピーしました