RT Book, Section T1 Efficacy of tDCS in Post-Stroke Aphasia Recovery. A1 Torres-Prioris, María José A1 Berthier-Torres, Marcelo Luis A1 López-Barroso, Diana A2 Arias, Natalia A2 Jiménez García, Ana María K1 Hemorragia cerebral - Complicaciones y secuelas K1 Enfermedades cerebrovasculares - Rehabilitación K1 Afasia AB Post-stroke aphasia, characterized by varying language deficits, typically arises following left-brain damage. Although speech-language therapy (SLT) is an effective treatment, it often fails to fully restore language functionality, underscoring the urgent need for innovative interventions. Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) emerges as a promising, safe, and feasible strategy that can be smoothly integrated into SLT routines. By modulating brain activity and fostering plastic changes, tDCS is particularly effective when paired with SLT, as this combination promotes experience-dependent plasticity in relevant networks. This strategy has shown considerable efficacy in enhancing the benefits of naming therapy, a primary focus area in aphasia literature. Despite fewer studies investigating other language domains, encouraging outcomes have been observed across virtually all language areas. However, larger and more rigorously controlled trials are essential to substantiate these findings. Significant variations in study designs, including stimulation parameters such as intensity, site, and duration, must also be addressed. Furthermore, individual factors like lesion location, size, and time post-stroke must be considered for more precise and personalized results. While anodal tDCS over the left hemisphere has received substantial support, there is an apparent need for individualized current flow modeling to ensure accurate stimulation sites. Increased research into high-definition tDCS is advocated to facilitate more focused stimulation and reduce inter-individual variability in current flow. As research advances, rigorously designed large-scale trials are critically needed to bridge existing knowledge gaps and fully harness the therapeutic potential of this innovative technology. PB Nova Science YR 2024 FD 2024-03-15 LK https://hdl.handle.net/10630/40204 UL https://hdl.handle.net/10630/40204 LA eng NO Torres-Prioris, M. J., Berthier, M. L., & López-Barroso, D. (2024). Efficacy of tDCS in post-stroke aphasia recovery. In N. Arias & A. M. Jiménez García (Eds.), An insight into neuromodulation: Current trends and future challenges (pp. 121–145). Nova Science Publishers. https://doi.org/10.52305/ZSNB2076 NO Capítulo de libro en colaboración con la red NEUROMOD. NO Adjunta permiso de la editorial DS RIUMA. Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de Málaga RD 19 ene 2026