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Global research trends in transcranial magnetic stimulation for stroke (1994-2023): promising, yet requiring further practice.
Li XY
,Hu R
,Lou TX
,Liu Y
,Ding L
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《Frontiers in Neurology》
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Exploring research trends and focal points in the application of transcranial magnetic stimulation for enhancing motor function in post-stroke patients: A bibliometric and content analytical approach.
Motor impairment is a significant health concern among post-stroke patients. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is considered as an emerging rehabilitation therapy for various neurological conditions, and the effects of excitatory TMS on post-stroke have received much attention in past decade. However, the future hotspots and content analysis on the growth trends have not been studied. This bibliometric and content analysis aimed to study the global developmental history and current status of TMS for motor function of post-stroke from January 2004 to July 2023.
Literature published on Scopus database from January 2004 to July 2023 were searched. Extracted data was analysed using the R studio and VOS viewer for author's publication, institutions, sources, keyword co-occurrence and world network analysis. Keyword cluster analysis, co-citation analysis for references and content analysis were also performed. We screened top 10 most cited or collaborative areas for publications, institutions and sources in the field of TMS associated with motor function of post-stroke.
In this study, a comprehensive analysis of 267 publications was conducted, revealing a substantial surge in research output throughout 2022. China emerged as the leading contributor, with 409 publications, followed by the United States with 211 publications. Notably, Harvard Medical School stood out as one of the most prolific institutions, accounting for 34 publications (13.12 %). Among researchers, Abo M garnered the highest publication count, with 9 articles (14.5 %). The Word cloud showed that motor function, repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) and upper limb have been the focus of recent attention. Burst keywords on thematic evolution and topic trend shows that quality of life scale, network parameters, cognition, lower limb motor function are the future trends.
This bibliometric study describes that TMS has shown promising results in improving motor function of upper extremity in stroke patients, the long-term effects and durability of these improvements are still being investigated. Future research might focus on understanding the optimal duration and frequency of TMS sessions for sustained motor recovery and exploring strategies to maintain gains achieved through TMS over extended periods of time. Future studies can investigate the changes in the lower limb motor function.
Devi M
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Research Hotspots and Global Trends of Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation in Stroke: A Bibliometric Analysis.
Transcranial direct current stimulation has been widely used in the clinical treatment of stroke. The purpose of this study was to perform a bibliometric analysis of scientific literature in this field.
Articles and reviews regarding transcranial direct current stimulation in stroke from January 01, 2004 to May 31, 2022 were identified from the Science Citation Index-Expanded of the Web of Science Core Collection database. CiteSpace 6.1.R2, Bibliometrix and the Bibliometric Online Analysis Platform were used to analyze data.
A total of 905 papers were obtained, with the highest number of publications coming from the USA. The institutions and authors with the most publications were Harvard Medical School and Fregni F respectively. Nitsche MA had the most co-citations, followed by Fregni F. Neurosciences was the most fruitful research area and Brain Stimulation had the highest H-index. The research topics could be divided into three sections: mechanisms of treatment, comparison of efficacy with transcranial magnetic stimulation, clinical application of post-stroke dysfunction. The field of "walking", "strength" and "virtual reality therapy" are the future research hotspots of transcranial direct current stimulation.
The overall research showed a slow growth trend, and the outstanding contribution of the USA in this field cannot be ignored. Relevant researchers are suggested to focus on international collaboration and actively conduct high-quality randomized controlled clinical trials on research hotspots and frontiers in order to identify the optimal stimulation paradigm for clinical purposes.
Zhou K
,Zhou Y
,Zeng Y
,Zhang J
,Cai X
,Qin J
,Li Z
,Yan F
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《Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment》
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Bibliometric and visual analysis of transcranial direct current stimulation in the web of science database from 2000 to 2022 via CiteSpace.
This study aimed to evaluate the current research hotspots and development tendency of Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) in the field of neurobiology from a bibliometric perspective by providing visualized information to scientists and clinicians.
Publications related to tDCS published between 2000 and 2022 were retrieved from the Web of Science Core Collection (WOSCC) on May 5, 2022. Bibliometric features including the number of publications and citations, citation frequency, H-index, journal impact factors, and journal citation reports were summarized using Microsoft Office Excel. Co-authorship, citation, co-citation, and co-occurrence analyses among countries, institutions, authors, co-authors, journals, publications, references, and keywords were analyzed and visualized using CiteSpace (version 6.1.R3).
A total of 4,756 publications on tDCS fulfilled the criteria we designed and then were extracted from the WOSCC. The United States (1,190 publications, 25.02%) and Harvard University (185 publications, 3.89%) were the leading contributors among all the countries and institutions, respectively. NITSCHE MA and FREGNI F, two key researchers, have made great achievements in tDCS. Brain Stimulation (306 publications) had the highest number of publications relevant to tDCS and the highest number of citations (4,042 times). In terms of potential hotspots, we observed through reference co-citation analysis timeline viewer related to tDCS that "depression"#0, "Sensorimotor network"#10, "working memory"#11, and "Transcranial magnetic stimulation"#9 might be the future research hotspots, while keywords with the strong burst and still ongoing were "intensity" (2018-2022), "impairment" (2020-2022), "efficacy" (2020-2022), and "guideline" (2020-2022).
This was the first-ever study of peer-reviewed publications relative to tDCS using several scientometric and visual analytic methods to quantitatively and qualitatively reveal the current research status and trends in the field of tDCS. Through the bibliometric method, we gained an in-depth understanding of the current research status and development trend on tDCS. Our research and analysis results might provide some practical sources for academic scholars and clinicians.
Sun W
,Song J
,Dong X
,Kang X
,He B
,Zhao W
,Li Z
,Feng Z
,Chen X
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《Frontiers in Human Neuroscience》
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Research hotspots and trends in post-stroke dysphagia: a bibliometric analysis.
Dysphagia represents one of the common complications following a stroke, and post-stroke dysphagia (PSD) can lead to aspiration, pneumonia, and malnutrition, thus prolonging hospital stay, escalating medical expenditures, and imposing a substantial economic strain on both patients and society. The utilization of bibliometric analysis offers a quantitative approach for investigating the existing literature and recognizes the current status of the research. However, bibliometric analysis on the subject of PSD remains absent. Consequently, we carried out this study to provide researchers with insights, facilitating their further exploration of PSD.
Conducting a bibliometric analysis of articles pertaining to PSD retrieved over the past two decades enables us to acquire the research hotspots and trends in this area. The publications concerning PSD were searched from the Core Collection of Web of Science, spanning the period ranging from 2003 to 2023. Articles or reviews published in English were included in this study. Subsequently, we employed CiteSpace and VOSviewer software to visualize the retrieved articles, thereby identifying the cooperative relationships of authors, institutions, and countries, as well as relevant information about journals and references.
This study comprised 866 papers in total, and the number of articles published each year shows an overall growth trend. As for the analysis of the authors, Dziewas R. was the most prolific author with 21 articles. The most frequently published institutions, countries, and journals were the University of Manchester, China, and Dysphagia, with 28, 254, and 75 publications, respectively. And the co-cited authors and journals with the highest counts were Martino R and Stroke. According to the analysis of keywords and references, dysphagia screening and assessment, prevention of pneumonia, rehabilitation approaches, and nutritional management of PSD are considered research hotpots. Additionally, future research may focus on the topics of systematic review and meta-analysis, noninvasive brain stimulation, and lesion location.
Through the bibliometrics analysis of PSD, we can capture the research hotspots and frontiers of PSD, thereby providing inspiration and reference for subsequent studies in this field.
Xu F
,Bai L
,Dai Z
,Cheng H
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《Frontiers in Neuroscience》