辅助电机区
丘脑
神经科学
形状记忆合金*
运动皮层
静止性震颤
运动前皮质
肌电图
心理学
小脑
皮质(解剖学)
姿势性震颤
前臂
物理医学与康复
初级运动皮层
医学
原发性震颤
功能磁共振成像
解剖
数学
多巴胺能
背
组合数学
刺激
多巴胺
作者
Martin Südmeyer,Bettina Pollok,Harald Hefter,Joachim Groß,Markus Butz,Lars Wojtecki,Lars Timmermann,Alfons Schnitzler
摘要
Abstract Common neurological manifestation of Wilson's disease (WD) is a postural tremor of the upper extremities. Recently, the primary sensorimotor cortex (S1/M1) has been shown to be involved in WD postural tremor generation. However, neuropathological changes in WD are mostly observed in subcortical structures. We therefore aimed to investigate whether S1/M1 may be functionally interconnected with other brain areas. In five WD patients, we used magnetoencephalography and surface electromyography (EMG) to record simultaneously cerebral neuronal activity and muscular activity during sustained posture of the right forearm. As demonstrated previously, the strongest coupling to tremor EMG was observed in the contralateral S1/M1. This area was taken as reference in order to identify and localize cerebro–cerebral coherence at tremor frequency and its first harmonic. The analysis revealed significant coherence within an oscillatory network including S1/M1, higher cortical motor areas (premotor cortex, PM; supplementary motor area, SMA), posterior parietal cortex (PPC) and thalamus contralateral as well as the cerebellum ipsilateral to the tremor forearm. Flow of information was mainly of bidirectional nature. Taken together, our results indicate that WD postural tremor is generated within a synchronized cerebello–thalamo–cortical network, comprising S1/M1, higher cortical motor areas (SMA, PM), and PPC. © 2006 Movement Disorder Society
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