Normalizing motor cortex representations in focal hand dystonia

SM Schabrun, CM Stinear, WD Byblow… - Cerebral …, 2009 - academic.oup.com
Cerebral cortex, 2009academic.oup.com
Task-specific focal dystonia is thought to have a neurological basis where stereotypical
synchronous inputs and maladaptive plasticity play a role. As afferent input is a powerful
driver of cortical reorganization, we propose that a period of asynchronous afferent
stimulation may reverse maladaptive cortical changes and alleviate symptoms. Using
transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), 3 hand muscles were mapped in 10 dystonics and
10 healthy controls. Mapping occurred before and after 1 h of nonassociative stimulation …
Abstract
Task-specific focal dystonia is thought to have a neurological basis where stereotypical synchronous inputs and maladaptive plasticity play a role. As afferent input is a powerful driver of cortical reorganization, we propose that a period of asynchronous afferent stimulation may reverse maladaptive cortical changes and alleviate symptoms. Using transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), 3 hand muscles were mapped in 10 dystonics and 10 healthy controls. Mapping occurred before and after 1 h of nonassociative stimulation (NAS) to first dorsal interosseous (FDI) and abductor pollicis brevis (APB). Participants performed grip lift, handwriting, and cyclic drawing before and after NAS. Prior to NAS, dystonics had larger maps, and the centers of gravity (CoGs) of the FDI and APB maps were closer together. Dystonics demonstrated impairments in grip-lift, handwriting, and cyclic drawing tasks. Following NAS, map size was reduced in all muscles in dystonic participants and FDI and APB CoGs moved further apart. Among dystonics, NAS produced a reduction in movement variability during cyclic drawing. Thus, 1 h of NAS can reduce the magnitude, and increase the separation, of TMS representational maps. We suggest that these changes reflect some normalization of the representational abnormalities seen in focal dystonia and provide initial, limited evidence that such changes are associated with improvements in circle drawing.
Oxford University Press