The acute effects of motor cortex transcranial direct current stimulation on athletic performance in healthy adults: A systematic review and meta‐analysis

Author:

Winker Matteo123,Hoffmann Sven4,Laborde Sylvain5,Javelle Florian6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Cologne Cologne Germany

2. Institute for Sport and Sport Science, Performance and Health (Sports Medicine) TU Dortmund University Dortmund Germany

3. Department for Molecular and Cellular Sports Medicine, Institute of Cardiovascular Research and Sports Medicine German Sport University Cologne Cologne Germany

4. Psychological Methods and Evaluation, Institute of Psychology University of Hagen Hagen Germany

5. Department of Performance Psychology, Institute of Psychology German Sport University Cologne Cologne Germany

6. NeuroPsychoImmunology research unit, Department for Molecular and Cellular Sports Medicine, Institute for Cardiovascular Research and Sports Medicine German Sport University Cologne Cologne Germany

Abstract

AbstractThis systematic review and meta‐analysis assesses independently the acute effects of anodal and cathodal motor cortex transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) on athletic performance in healthy adults. Besides, it evaluates the unique and conjoint effects of potential moderators (i.e., stimulation parameters, exercise type, subjects' training status and risk of bias). Online database search was performed from inception until March 18th 2024 (PROSPERO: CRD42023355461). Forty‐three controlled trials were included in the systematic review, 40 in the anodal tDCS meta‐analysis (68 effects), and 9 (11 effects) in the cathodal tDCS meta‐analysis. Performance enhancement between pre‐ and post‐stimulation was the main outcome measure considered. The anodal tDCS effects on physical performance were small to moderate (g = .29, 95%CI [.18, .40], PI = −.64 to 1.23, I2 = 64.0%). Exercise type, training status and use of commercial tDCS were significant moderators of the results. The cathodal tDCS effects were null (g = .04, 95%CI [−.05, .12], PI = −.14 to .23, I2 = 0%), with a small to moderate heterogeneity entirely due to sampling error, thus impairing further moderator analysis. These findings hold significant implications for the field of brain stimulation and physical performance, as they not only demonstrate a small to moderate effect of acute tDCS but also identify specific categories of individuals, devices and activities that are more susceptible to improvements. By addressing the multidimensional factors influencing the mechanisms of tDCS, we also provide suggestions for future research.

Publisher

Wiley

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