2005
DOI: 10.1002/mds.20626
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Corticospinal excitability during motor imagery of a simple tonic finger movement in patients with writer's cramp

Abstract: Motor imagery (MI) is the mental rehearsal of a motor act without overt movement. Using transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), we tested the effect of MI on corticospinal excitability in patients with writer's cramp. In 10 patients with writer's cramp and 10 healthy controls, we applied focal TMS over each primary motor area and recorded motor evoked potentials (MEPs) from contralateral hand and arm muscles while participants imagined a tonic abduction of the index finger contralateral to the stimulated hemi… Show more

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Cited by 49 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…In Parkinson’s patients the typical cortico-spinal excitability in response to the imagination of a movement is drastically reduced with respect to healthy controls (Tremblay et al, 2008). With regard to FHD patients, Quartarone et al (2005) delivered the TMS pulse while participants were imagining index flexion. Similarly to the results shown by Sohn and Hallet (2004) on movement execution, during motor imagery the amplitude of motor-evoked potentials of all recorded hand and forearm surround muscles was increased in FHD patients, even for the arm not involved in motor imagery (Quartarone et al, 2005).…”
Section: Mental Imagery and Rotation As “Clean” Tools To Investigate mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In Parkinson’s patients the typical cortico-spinal excitability in response to the imagination of a movement is drastically reduced with respect to healthy controls (Tremblay et al, 2008). With regard to FHD patients, Quartarone et al (2005) delivered the TMS pulse while participants were imagining index flexion. Similarly to the results shown by Sohn and Hallet (2004) on movement execution, during motor imagery the amplitude of motor-evoked potentials of all recorded hand and forearm surround muscles was increased in FHD patients, even for the arm not involved in motor imagery (Quartarone et al, 2005).…”
Section: Mental Imagery and Rotation As “Clean” Tools To Investigate mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With regard to FHD patients, Quartarone et al (2005) delivered the TMS pulse while participants were imagining index flexion. Similarly to the results shown by Sohn and Hallet (2004) on movement execution, during motor imagery the amplitude of motor-evoked potentials of all recorded hand and forearm surround muscles was increased in FHD patients, even for the arm not involved in motor imagery (Quartarone et al, 2005). This highlights the broad and less focused muscular activity in FHD patients compared with healthy subjects, even in the case of simply imagined movements.…”
Section: Mental Imagery and Rotation As “Clean” Tools To Investigate mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…stroke victims 23 and patients suffering from writer's cramp. 24 Based on the study by Marshall et al, 3 we hypothesized that patients with a functional paresis would not be able to enhance motor excitability during imagery of movements with the affected body part, but that imagery of movements with a non-affected extremity would produce a similar excitability increase as in healthy subjects.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…an increase in the relative amount of irrelevant information, is very different from definitions of stress that emphasize the degree of activation of the autonomic nervous system [20]. These observations raise the possibility that the altered brain activation during MI observed for patients with diseases of the nervous system such as apraxia [69], Parkinson's disease [70] and writer's cramp [71], may be in part relate to difficulties that such individuals have in filtering out irrelevant information.…”
Section: Performancementioning
confidence: 63%