4.7 Article

Motor impairment evoked by direct electrical stimulation of human parietal cortex during object manipulation

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 248, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118839

Keywords

Human Parietal cortex; motor control; hand-manipulation; EMG; intraoperative stimulation

Funding

  1. Regione Lombardia under the Eloquentstim Project (PorFesr, 2014-2020)
  2. AIRC (Associazione Italiana Ricerca sul Cancro) [18482]

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The study found that different regions of the parietal cortex have varying effects on hand muscle control and manipulation, suggesting the presence of different functional sectors within the parietal cortex. The task-arrest pattern may be associated with parietal sectors more closely implicated in shaping motor output.
A B S T R A C T In primates, the parietal cortex plays a crucial role in hand-object manipulation. However, its involvement in object manipulation and related hand-muscle control has never been investigated in humans with a direct and focal electrophysiological approach. To this aim, during awake surgery for brain tumors, we studied the impact of direct electrical stimulation (DES) of parietal lobe on hand-muscles during a hand-manipulation task (HMt). Results showed that DES applied to fingers-representation of postcentral gyrus (PCG) and anterior intraparietal cortex (aIPC) impaired HMt execution. Different types of EMG-interference patterns were observed ranging from a partial (task-clumsy) or complete (task-arrest) impairment of muscles activity. Within PCG both patterns coexisted along a medio (arrest)-lateral (clumsy) distribution, while aIPC hosted preferentially the task-arrest. The interference patterns were mainly associated to muscles suppression, more pronounced in aIPC with respect to PCG. Moreover, within PCG were observed patterns with different level of muscle recruitment, not reported in the aIPC. Overall, EMG-interference patterns and their probabilistic distribution suggested the presence of different functional parietal sectors, possibly playing different roles in hand-muscle control during manipulation. We hypothesized that task-arrest, compared to clumsy patterns, might suggest the existence of parietal sectors more closely implicated in shaping the motor output.

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