CORTICOCORTICAL INHIBITION IN HUMAN MOTOR CORTEX

被引:2575
作者
KUJIRAI, T [1 ]
CARAMIA, MD [1 ]
ROTHWELL, JC [1 ]
DAY, BL [1 ]
THOMPSON, PD [1 ]
FERBERT, A [1 ]
WROE, S [1 ]
ASSELMAN, P [1 ]
MARSDEN, CD [1 ]
机构
[1] INST NEUROL,MRC,HUMAN MOVEMENT & BALANCE UNIT,QUEEN SQ,LONDON WC1N 3BG,ENGLAND
来源
JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON | 1993年 / 471卷
关键词
D O I
10.1113/jphysiol.1993.sp019912
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
1. In ten normal volunteers, a transcranial magnetic or electric stimulus that was subthreshold for evoking an EMG response in relaxed muscles was used to condition responses evoked by a later, suprathreshold magnetic or electric test shock. In most experiments the test stimulus was given to the lateral part of the motor strip in order to evoke EMG responses in the first dorsal interosseous muscle (FDI). 2. A magnetic conditioning stimulus over the hand area of cortex could suppress responses produced in the relaxed FDI by a suprathreshold magnetic test stimulus at interstimulus intervals of 1-6 ms. At interstimulus intervals of 10 and 15 ms, the test response was facilitated. 3. Using a focal magnetic stimulus we explored the effects of moving the conditioning stimulus to different scalp locations while maintaining the magnetic test coil at one site. If the conditioning coil was moved anterior or posterior to the motor strip there was less suppression of test responses in the FDI. In contrast, stimulation at the vertex could suppress FDI responses by an amount comparable to that seen with stimulation over the hand area. With the positions of the two coils reversed, conditioning stimuli over the hand area suppressed responses evoked in leg muscles by vertex test shocks. 4. The intensity of both conditioning and test shocks influenced the amount of suppression. Small test responses were more readily suppressed than large responses. The best suppression was seen with small conditioning stimuli (0.7-0.9 times motor threshold in relaxed muscle); increasing the intensity to motor threshold or above resulted in less suppression or even facilitation. 5. Two experiments suggested that the suppression was produced by an action on cortical, rather than spinal excitability. First, a magnetic conditioning stimulus over the hand area failed to produce any suppression of responses evoked in active hand muscles by a small (approximately 200 V, 50 mus time constant) anodal electric test shock. Second, a vertex conditioning shock had no effect on forearm flexor H reflexes even though responses in the same muscles produced by magnetic cortical test shocks were readily suppressed at appropriate interstimulus intervals. 6. Small anodal electric conditioning stimuli were much less effective in suppressing magnetic test responses than either magnetic or cathodal electric conditioning shocks. This suggests that neither refractoriness of corticospinal axons nor activity in pyramidal recurrent collaterals was important in producing suppression. 7. The results are consistent with the idea that a weak magnetic conditioning stimulus over the motor cortex can engage intracortical inhibitory circuits. The possible relationship to previously described inhibitory effects from motor cortex stimulation in man and GABAergic inhibitory mechanisms in animals is discussed.
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收藏
页码:501 / 519
页数:19
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