ELECTROMYOGRAPHY AND MOTOR CONTROL-ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY AND CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
|
1998年
/
109卷
/
04期
关键词:
H-reflex;
transcranial magnetic stimulation;
spinal cord injury;
human;
central motor conduction;
D O I:
10.1016/S0924-980X(98)00021-6
中图分类号:
R318 [生物医学工程];
学科分类号:
0831 ;
摘要:
Objectives: To examine the basis for delay in the excitatory effects of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) of motor cortex on motoneuron pools of muscles left partially-paralyzed by traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI). Methods: The effect of subthreshold transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) on just-suprathreshold H-reflex amplitude was examined in subjects (n = 10) with incomplete cervical SCI, and in able-bodied (AB) subjects (n = 20) for comparison. EMG activity was recorded from the soleus and the abductor hallucis muscles, and H-reflex was elicited by stimulation of the tibial nerve behind the knee. Comparison of the peak-to-peak amplitude of the TMS-conditioned H-reflex to that of the H-reflex alone (i.e. unconditioned H-reflex) was made for different conditioning-test intervals with multivariate analysis of variance and (when called for) t testing. Results: The absolute latencies of motor responses to suprathreshold TMS delivered during a weak voluntary contraction of the soleus and abductor hallucis were significantly prolonged in the SCI group relative to AB subjects. For the TMS-conditioned H-reflex, the timecourse effect of TMS on the H-reflex amplitude in different AB subjects included an early effect (typically facilitation, but occasionally inhibition) seen between -5 and 0 ms, followed by a later period (i.e. >5 ms) of H-reflex facilitation. In contrast, the earliest indication of a TMS effect on H-reflex excitability in SCT subjects was between 5 and 10 ms after TMS. This difference between SCI and AB subjects of approximately 10 ms was similar to the prolongation of TMS-evoked response latencies in the soleus and the abductor hallucis muscles of the SCI subjects. Conclusions: The results suggest that motor conduction slowing after traumatic SCI most likely occurs across the population of the descending tract axons mediating the TMS-evoked motor responses. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.