Frontiers in Psychiatry (Nov 2017)

Unexpected Improvement of Hand Motor Function with a Left Temporoparietal Low-Frequency Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Regime Suppressing Auditory Hallucinations in a Brainstem Chronic Stroke Patient

  • Fanny Thomas,
  • Fanny Thomas,
  • Noomane Bouaziz,
  • Julià L. Amengual,
  • Palmyre Schenin-King Andrianisaina,
  • Christian Gaudeau-Bosma,
  • Virginie Moulier,
  • Antoni Valero-Cabré,
  • Antoni Valero-Cabré,
  • Antoni Valero-Cabré,
  • Antoni Valero-Cabré,
  • Dominique Januel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2017.00262
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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We here report paradoxical hand function recovery in a 61-year-old male tetra-paretic chronic patient following a stroke of the brainstem (with highly degraded right and abolished left-hand finger flexion/extension disabling him to manipulate objects) who experienced insidious auditory hallucinations (AHs) 4 years after such event. Symptomatic treatment for AHs was provided with periodical double sessions of low-frequency repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) (daily 1 Hz, 2 × 1,200 pulses interleaved by 1 h interval) delivered to the left temporoparietal junction across two periods of 5 and 3 weeks, respectively. At the end of each stimulation period, AHs disappeared completely. Most surprisingly and totally unexpectedly, the patient experienced beneficial improvements of long-lasting impairments in his right-hand function. Detailed examination of onset and offset of rTMS stimulation regimes strongly suggests a temporal relation with the remission and re-appearance of AHs and also with a fragile but clinically meaningful improvements of right (but not left) hand function contingent to the accrual of stimulation sessions. On the basis of post-recovery magnetic resonance imaging structural and functional evidence, mechanistic hypotheses that could subtend such unexpected motor recovery are critically discussed.

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