4.2 Article

Investigation of the posterior parietal cortex to ventral premotor connection in writer's cramp using transcranial magnetic stimulation

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 240, Issue 6, Pages 1757-1763

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00221-022-06374-y

Keywords

Dystonia; Writer's cramp; Premotor; Parietal; Connectivity; Transcranial magnetic stimulation

Categories

Funding

  1. Korean Neurological Association [KNA-15-SK-04]
  2. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
  3. NINDS Intramural Program

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This study investigated the influence of the posterior parietal cortex on the ipsilateral ventral premotor cortex using TMS. The results showed that the inhibitory effect of the left posterior parietal cortex on the ipsilateral ventral premotor cortex is intact in both healthy subjects and WC patients at rest. Additionally, a facilitatory effect of the posterior parietal cortex on the primary motor cortex was found in both groups.
The posterior parietal, premotor and motor cortices are brain regions relevant in the planning of movement. Previous transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) studies have shown ipsilateral premotor-to-motor inhibition in healthy subjects at rest. This premotor-to-motor inhibition has been found to be altered in patients with writer's cramp (WC), a common type of focal hand dystonia. We aimed to investigate the influence of the posterior parietal cortex on the ipsilateral ventral premotor cortex using a three single-pulse TMS paradigm. Nineteen right-handed subjects (eleven healthy volunteers and eight WC patients) completed the study. A three single-pulse TMS paradigm (preconditioning, conditioning, and test stimuli) was used to sequentially stimulate the left posterior parietal, ventral premotor, and primary motor cortices. We found that in both healthy subjects and patients, stimulating the ipsilateral posterior parietal cortex resulted in reversal of the resting premotor-to-motor inhibition. Resting premotor-to-motor inhibition was also found, with no statistically significant group difference. Furthermore, a facilitatory effect of the posterior parietal cortex on the primary motor cortex was found in both groups. Our results suggest that in the resting state, the inhibitory effect of the left posterior parietal cortex on the ipsilateral ventral premotor cortex found in healthy subjects is also intact in WC patients. While we are unable to identify any parietal-to-premotor connectivity abnormality in the resting state, an abnormality during a specific task cannot be excluded. Previously reported conductivity abnormalities in resting fMRI do not appear to translate into a TMS physiological abnormality.

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