经颅磁脑刺激诱发脊髓损伤个体脊髓运动神经元兴奋性变化的潜伏期

Natalia Alexeeva, James G Broton, Blair Calancie
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引用次数: 51

摘要

目的:探讨经颅磁刺激(TMS)对外伤性脊髓损伤(SCI)后部分瘫痪肌肉运动神经元池兴奋作用延迟的基础。方法:采用阈下经颅磁刺激(TMS)对不完全性脊髓损伤患者(n=10)和健康人(n=20)的阈上h反射振幅的影响进行比较。记录比目鱼肌和幻觉外展肌的肌电图活动,并通过刺激膝后胫神经引起h反射。比较经颅磁刺激条件h反射与单独h反射(即非条件h反射)的峰间振幅,采用多变量方差分析和(必要时)t检验。结果:与AB组相比,SCI组在比目鱼肌和外展幻觉弱自愿收缩时传递的阈上TMS运动反应的绝对潜伏期明显延长。对于经颅磁刺激条件下的h反射,经颅磁刺激对不同AB受试者h反射振幅的时间过程效应包括- 5 ~ 0 ms之间的早期效应(通常为促进作用,但偶尔有抑制作用),随后是较晚的h反射促进期(即5 ms)。相比之下,经颅磁刺激对脊髓损伤受试者h反射兴奋性影响的最早迹象出现在经颅磁刺激后5至10 ms之间。SCI与AB受试者之间约10 ms的差异与SCI受试者的比目鱼肌和幻觉外展肌tms诱发反应潜伏期的延长相似。结论:创伤性脊髓损伤后的运动传导减慢很可能发生在介导tms诱发的运动反应的下行束轴突上。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Latency of changes in spinal motoneuron excitability evoked by transcranial magnetic brain stimulation in spinal cord injured individuals

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 time-course 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 SCI 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.

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