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Título
fNIRS Feasibility to measure brain oxygenation patterns of the motor cortex in relation to massage and reflex locomotion therapy in babies
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Babies
fNIRS
Bebés
Espectroscopía Funcional de Infrarrojo Cercano
Massage
Masaje
Reflex locomotion therapy
Terapia de locomoción refleja
Brain oxygenation
Oxigenación cerebral
Fecha de publicación
2025
Editor
https://www.mdpi.com/2077-0383/14/11/3818/pdf?version=1748514732
Citación
Llamas-Ramos, R.; Sánchez-González, J.L.; Alvarado- Omenat, J.J.; Sanz-Esteban, I.; Serrano, J.I.; Llamas-Ramos, I. fNIRS Feasibility to Measure Brain Oxygenation Patterns of the Motor Cortex in Relation to Massage and Reflex Locomotion Therapy in Babies. J. Clin. Med. 2025, 14, 3818. https://doi.org/ 10.3390/jcm14113818
Resumen
Background: Newborns’ plasticity allows the brain to adapt and reorganize in response to external stimuli; therefore, tactile stimuli could generate brain changes. The objective of this study was to verify the feasibility of using fNIRS to measure the degree of brain oxygenation with tactile techniques in babies. Methods: Oxygenation was recorded continuously and bilaterally before, during, and after the interventions (massage protocol and Reflex Locomotion Therapy) with functional near-infrared spectroscopy in 11-week-old babies. Results: Preliminary data suggested that the massage intervention decreased the activity bilaterally (first minute of the intervention) and then increased it bilaterally (second minute), where it continued to increase in the left hemisphere (third minute) before decreasing bilaterally (fourth minute). Finally, the activity continued to decrease in the right hemisphere but increased in the most dorsal area of the left hemisphere (fifth minute). For the Reflex Locomotion intervention, the activity substantially increased bilaterally (first minute of the intervention) and then decreased bilaterally, but more pronouncedly in the left hemisphere (second minute). Then, the activity decreased to pre-intervention values (third minute) and increased bilaterally again, but pronouncedly in the right hemisphere (fourth minute). In the fifth minute, the activity in the right hemisphere drastically decreased, but it increased in the left hemisphere. During the post-intervention resting period, in the massage intervention, the activity increased in the right hemisphere and in the most ventral part of the left hemisphere; in Reflex Locomotion Therapy, the activity decreased only in the left hemisphere. Conclusions: Both techniques achieve a potential increase in oxyhemoglobin concentration bilaterally during stimulation, but while the effects decrease with Reflex Locomotion Therapy, the effects are maintained with massage. More studies are needed to establish the neurophysiological basis of these therapies in pediatrics.
URI
DOI
10.3390/JCM14113818
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Patrocinador
This research was funded by the Universidad de Salamanca and the Colegio Profesional de Fisioterapeutas de Castilla y Le\u00F3n. Financiadores Universidad de Salamanca Spain Colegio Profesional de Fisioterapeutas de Castilla y León
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