Low-frequency cortical activity is a neuromodulatory target that tracks recovery after stroke

被引:0
|
作者
Dhakshin S. Ramanathan
Ling Guo
Tanuj Gulati
Gray Davidson
April K. Hishinuma
Seok-Joon Won
Robert T. Knight
Edward F. Chang
Raymond A. Swanson
Karunesh Ganguly
机构
[1] San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center,Neurology Service
[2] San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center,Mental Health Service
[3] University of California,Department of Psychiatry
[4] San Francisco,Mental Health Service
[5] VA San Diego Health System,Department of Psychiatry
[6] San Diego,Neuroscience Graduate Program
[7] University of California,Department of Neurology
[8] San Diego,Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute
[9] University of California,Department of Psychology
[10] San Francisco,Department of Neurosurgery
[11] University of California,undefined
[12] San Francisco,undefined
[13] University of California,undefined
[14] Berkeley,undefined
[15] University of California,undefined
[16] Berkeley,undefined
[17] University of California,undefined
[18] San Francisco,undefined
来源
Nature Medicine | 2018年 / 24卷
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学科分类号
摘要
Recent work has highlighted the importance of transient low-frequency oscillatory (LFO; <4 Hz) activity in the healthy primary motor cortex during skilled upper-limb tasks. These brief bouts of oscillatory activity may establish the timing or sequencing of motor actions. Here, we show that LFOs track motor recovery post-stroke and can be a physiological target for neuromodulation. In rodents, we found that reach-related LFOs, as measured in both the local field potential and the related spiking activity, were diminished after stroke and that spontaneous recovery was closely correlated with their restoration in the perilesional cortex. Sensorimotor LFOs were also diminished in a human subject with chronic disability after stroke in contrast to two non-stroke subjects who demonstrated robust LFOs. Therapeutic delivery of electrical stimulation time-locked to the expected onset of LFOs was found to significantly improve skilled reaching in stroke animals. Together, our results suggest that restoration or modulation of cortical oscillatory dynamics is important for the recovery of upper-limb function and that they may serve as a novel target for clinical neuromodulation.
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页码:1257 / 1267
页数:10
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