FACILITATION OF MOTOR EVOKED-POTENTIALS FROM MAGNETIC BRAIN-STIMULATION IN MAN - A COMPARATIVE-STUDY OF DIFFERENT TARGET MUSCLES

被引:75
|
作者
KISCHKA, U [1 ]
FAJFR, R [1 ]
FELLENBERG, T [1 ]
HESS, CW [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV BERN,DEPT NEUROL,CH-3000 BERN,SWITZERLAND
关键词
MAGNETIC STIMULATION; CORTICAL STIMULATION; MOTOR EVOKED POTENTIALS; FACILITATION; TARGET MUSCLE;
D O I
10.1097/00004691-199310000-00008
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
The influence of tonic muscle contraction and stimulus intensity on compound muscle action potentials (CMAPs) elicited by magnetic brain stimulation was studied in the biceps brachii (34 subjects), the abductor digiti minimi (11 subjects), the anterior tibial muscle (12 subjects), and the soleus muscle (5 subjects). The muscles were examined at rest and with various degrees of background contraction of up to 60% of maximum force. Stimulus intensity was set at threshold (TSI) or 20% above threshold (1.2 TSI), and in one series additionally at 50% above threshold (1.5 TSI). The effect of voluntary background contraction on CMAP onset latency was similar in the four muscles tested: the latencies shortened by approximately 3 ms when the muscles changed from the relaxed to the contracted state of the 10% of maximum force. An additional increase in the background contraction up to 60% of maximum force induced only few, if any, additional decreases in latency. The uniformity of the latency shift in distal and proximal muscles conflicts with the idea of recruitment of larger and rapidly conducting motoneurons being the cause, since this hypothesis would imply a more pronounced latency reduction in distal than in proximal muscles. The shorter latency during voluntary contraction is more likely due to an enhanced synaptic efficacy at spinal level. Since the motoneurons are brought into an increased state of activity during contraction, they require less temporal summation to reach firing threshold and thus discharge earlier. The CMAP amplitudes of the different muscles were more distinctly affected by voluntary background contraction. When the background contraction was increased, the amplitudes of the anterior tibial muscle rose rapidly and reached a relative plateau at a contraction of 20% of maximum force with suprathreshold brain stimuli. A similar, yet more pronounced amplitude increment with increasing background contraction has been previously described for the abductor digiti minimi. In contrast, the amplitudes of the biceps and soleus muscle did not show this tendency to saturate at low background contraction and showed a more gradual increment with increasing contraction. This did not change much when greatly suprathreshold brain stimuli were used for the biceps.
引用
收藏
页码:505 / 512
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Facilitation of motor evoked potentials of magnetic peripheral nerve stimulation by voluntary muscle contraction
    Okamoto, M
    Kitamura, O
    Ito, S
    Mori, S
    RECENT ADVANCES IN HUMAN NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1998, 1162 : 998 - 1004
  • [42] EVALUATION OF PATIENTS WITH MULTIPLE-SCLEROSIS BY EVOKED-POTENTIALS AND MAGNETIC-RESONANCE-IMAGING - A COMPARATIVE-STUDY
    CUTLER, JR
    AMINOFF, MJ
    BRANTZAWADZKI, M
    ANNALS OF NEUROLOGY, 1986, 20 (05) : 645 - 648
  • [43] COMPARATIVE-STUDY OF VISUAL EVOKED-POTENTIALS (VEPS) AND ELECTRORETINOGRAM (ERG) IN 3 DIFFERENT TYPES OF RETINAL PATHOLOGY
    GADEACIRIA, M
    ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY AND CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1988, 69 (04): : P67 - P67
  • [44] MOTOR EVOKED-POTENTIALS BY MAGNETIC STIMULATION IN ACUTE ISCHEMIC STROKE - PROGNOSTIC-SIGNIFICANCE
    KUMAR, KA
    MURTHY, JMK
    NEUROLOGY INDIA, 1995, 43 (02) : 91 - 95
  • [45] ORIGINS AND CONDUCTING PATHWAYS OF MOTOR EVOKED-POTENTIALS ELICITED BY TRANSCRANIAL MAGNETIC STIMULATION IN CATS
    KAWAI, N
    NAGAO, S
    FRIEDMAN, WA
    ORO, J
    NEUROSURGERY, 1992, 31 (03) : 520 - 527
  • [46] MOTOR EVOKED-POTENTIALS (MEP) TO MAGNETIC STIMULATION IN CHRONIC AND ACUTE INFLAMMATORY DEMYELINATIVE POLYNEUROPATHY
    WOHRLE, JC
    KAMMER, T
    STEINKE, W
    HENNERICI, M
    NEUROLOGY, 1994, 44 (04) : A135 - A135
  • [47] Motor-evoked potentials elicited from human erector spinae muscles by transcranial magnetic stimulation
    Taniguchi, S
    Tani, T
    SPINE, 1999, 24 (02) : 154 - 156
  • [48] EVOKED-POTENTIALS IN FULL-TERM AND PREMATURE-INFANTS - A COMPARATIVE-STUDY
    UYSAL, S
    RENDA, Y
    TOPCU, M
    ERDEM, G
    KARACAN, R
    CHILDS NERVOUS SYSTEM, 1993, 9 (02) : 88 - 92
  • [49] Post-exercise facilitation and depression of motor evoked potentials to transcranial magnetic stimulation: a study in multiple sclerosis
    Perretti, A
    Balbi, P
    Orefice, G
    Trojano, L
    Marcantonio, L
    Brescia-Morra, V
    Ascione, S
    Manganelli, F
    Conte, G
    Santoro, L
    CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2004, 115 (09) : 2128 - 2133
  • [50] Change in Motor Evoked Potentials (MEP) of the Suprahyoid Muscles By Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation
    Kamura, Yuhi
    Aoyagi, Y.
    Metani, H.
    Shimizu, S.
    Hiraoka, T.
    Yamaguchi, W.
    Tsubahara, A.
    DYSPHAGIA, 2010, 25 (04) : 365 - 365