PHYSIOLOGICAL STUDY OF CERVICAL DYSTONIA - TASK-SPECIFIC ABNORMALITY IN CONTINGENT NEGATIVE-VARIATION

被引:81
作者
KAJI, R
IKEDA, A
IKEDA, T
KUBORI, T
MEZAKI, T
KOHARA, N
KANDA, M
NAGAMINE, T
HONDA, M
ROTHWELL, JC
SHIBASAKI, H
KIMURA, J
机构
[1] KYOTO UNIV, SCH MED, DEPT BRAIN PATHOPHYSIOL, KYOTO, JAPAN
[2] TAKEDA GEN HOSP, DYSTONIA CLIN RES CTR, KYOTO, JAPAN
[3] INST NEUROL, MRC, HUMAN MOVEMENT & BALANCE UNIT, LONDON WC1N 3BG, ENGLAND
关键词
CERVICAL DYSTONIA; TORTICOLLIS; CONTINGENT NEGATIVE VARIATION; MOTOR SUBROUTINE; TASK SPECIFICITY;
D O I
10.1093/brain/118.2.511
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
To investigate the pathophysiology of dystonia, we recorded contingent negative variation (CNV) in 12 patients with cervical dystonia and in 12 age-matched normal subjects. In a simple reaction time paradigm, the subjects were given a pair of a warning stimulus and a subsequent stimulus that triggered head rotation to either side or extension of the fingers. In normal subjects, CNVs for head rotation were not affected by neck muscle pre-activation simulating torticollis, and were always symmetrical with equally high amplitudes over the frontal and central leads. By contrast CNVs for finger movement had the maximum over the central lead and showed a characteristic distribution; those for the right finger movement had the left hemisphere dominance, whereas those for the left finger movement had similar amplitudes over both hemispheres. In patients with rotatory torticollis (rotatocollis), the components of CNVs for head rotation were markedly attenuated in all the leads, except for the initial negative deflection (orienting response). As a whole, cervical dystonia patients had significantly lower amplitudes of late CNVs for head rotation than normal subjects (P < 0.001), whereas late CNV amplitudes in finger extension did not differ in the two groups. Their reaction times for head rotation were similar but durations of EMC activities were prolonged in the patients because of co-contractions of the antagonists. The task-specific CNV amplitude loss is therefore not explained by reaction times or by the abnormal neck muscle activities prior to the movement, but it reflects a failure of neural activities preparing for a phasic neck movement resulting in co-contraction of the agonists and the antagonist. Dystonia may be associated with defective retrieval or retaining of specific motor programmes or subroutines in. response to sensory stimuli.
引用
收藏
页码:511 / 522
页数:12
相关论文
共 46 条
[1]   DISTRIBUTION OF SLOW BRAIN POTENTIALS RELATED TO MOTOR PREPARATION AND STIMULUS ANTICIPATION IN A TIME-ESTIMATION TASK [J].
BRUNIA, CHM ;
DAMEN, EJP .
ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY AND CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1988, 69 (03) :234-243
[2]   TARDIVE DYSTONIA - LATE-ONSET AND PERSISTENT DYSTONIA CAUSED BY ANTI-PSYCHOTIC DRUGS [J].
BURKE, RE ;
FAHN, S ;
JANKOVIC, J ;
MARSDEN, CD ;
LANG, AE ;
GOLLOMP, S ;
ILSON, J .
NEUROLOGY, 1982, 32 (12) :1335-1346
[3]  
DEECKE L, 1969, EXP BRAIN RES, V7, P158
[4]   CNV CORRELATES OF TASK DIFFICULTY AND ACCURACY OF PITCH DISCRIMINATION [J].
DELSE, FC ;
THOMPSON, LW ;
MARSH, GR .
PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 1972, 9 (01) :53-+
[5]   CLINICAL AND POLYMYOGRAPHIC INVESTIGATION OF SPASMODIC TORTICOLLIS [J].
DEUSCHL, G ;
HEINEN, F ;
KLEEDORFER, B ;
WAGNER, M ;
LUCKING, CH ;
POEWE, W .
JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY, 1992, 239 (01) :9-15
[6]   THE BEREITSCHAFTSPOTENTIAL IS ABNORMAL IN PARKINSONS-DISEASE [J].
DICK, JPR ;
ROTHWELL, JC ;
DAY, BL ;
CANTELLO, R ;
BURUMA, O ;
GIOUX, M ;
BENECKE, R ;
BERARDELLI, A ;
THOMPSON, PD ;
MARSDEN, CD .
BRAIN, 1989, 112 :233-244
[7]  
Fahn S, 1988, Adv Neurol, V50, P1
[8]  
FERGUSON D, 1971, BRIT J IND MED, V28, P280
[9]   ABNORMAL MOVEMENT-RELATED POTENTIALS IN PATIENTS WITH LESIONS OF BASAL GANGLIA AND ANTERIOR THALAMUS [J].
FEVE, A ;
BATHIEN, N ;
RONDOT, P .
JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY NEUROSURGERY AND PSYCHIATRY, 1994, 57 (01) :100-104
[10]   EFFECTS OF WARNING-SIGNAL MODALITY ON CONTINGENT NEGATIVE-VARIATION (CNV) [J].
GAILLARD, AWK .
BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1976, 4 (02) :139-153