MEDIAN NERVE STIMULATION PO TENTIATES THE MU SCLE RESPONSES TO TRANS C RANIAL MAGNETIC STIMULATION

Authors

  • AR JAMSHIDI FARD From the Department of Physiology, Arak University of Medical Sciences, Arak, Islamic Republic of Iran,
  • EM SEDGWICK the Department of Clinical Neurological Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton General Hospital, Southampton, S09 4XY, U.K.
Abstract:

Motor responses evoked by transcranial magnetic stimulation OMS) or transcranial electrical stimulation (TCS) can be facilitated by a prior conditioning stimulus to an afferent nerve. Two facilitation periods are described short (SI), when the nerve stimulus is given near 0 to 10 ms after cranial stimulation, and long (LI), when nerve stimulation is given 25-60 ms before the cranial stimulation. I These facilitation periods were examined in more detail in 10 normal consenting subjects. The study has ethical committee approval. Focal cortical TMS was applied contralaterally by a figure-of-eight coil over the "hot spot" for the right hand muscles and the strength adjusted to be just above twitch threshold for the relaxed muscle. Conditioning electrical stimuli were applied to the right median nerve at the wrist, again at a strength just suprathreshold for a twitch in APE. The conditioning-test (CT) interval was varied from -80 to + 1 0 with respect to the magnetic stimulus and 5 magnetic stimuli were tried at each interval. The results confirm the short facilitation period when the C-T interval was -6 to +3 ms. Consideration of the timing indicates that this must occur at the spinal segmental level. The long period of facilitation lasted from 27-70 ms, but it was divided into two periods (27-35 and 55-70 ms) in all subjects, separated by an interval of about 20 ms during which the test response fell to control levels. The long late facilitations may be cortical as the earliest facilitation began at 27 ms having the afferent volley reached the sensory cortex at 20 ms. The long interval facilitation consists of two temporally separate processes, implying separate cortical mechanisms creating a bimodal excitability cycle at the level of motor cortex.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

Median Nerve Stimulation

brain injury due to cerebrovascular disorder, whos lives can be saved, has increased. Along with this phenomenon, however, the number of patients with persistent vegetative state has been increasing, and thus constitutes an important issue. No effective treatment method for persistent vegetative state has been established but some reports have recently shown that spinal epidural stimulation and...

full text

Magnetic Nerve Stimulation

Magnetic nerve stimulation is a noninvasive, noncontact means of exciting nerves. Magnetic stimulators generate eddy currents in tissue by producing a high-amplitude, short-duration magnetic pulse from a small coil located near the tissue. A simple circuit can generate the large coil currents necessary for magnetic nerve stimulation. Careful selection of circuit components is necessary to contr...

full text

O18: Vague Nerve Stimulation

لطفاً به چکیده انگلیسی مراجعه شود.

full text

BOLD responses to trigeminal nerve stimulation.

The current study investigates a new model of barrel cortex activation using stimulation of the infraorbital branch of the trigeminal nerve. A robust and reproducible activation of the rat barrel cortex was obtained following trigeminal nerve stimulation. Blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) effects were obtained in the primary somatosensory barrel cortex (S1BF), the secondary somatosensory cort...

full text

Electroencephalographic Responses to Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation

In this Thesis, consisting of five original publications (Publ. I–V) and a summary, the feasibility of the combination of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and electroencephalography (EEG) for the study of cortical reactivity and connectivity has been explored in humans. To stimulate the cerebral cortex through electromagnetic induction, a coil of wire was placed above the person’s head a...

full text

Magnetic stimulation of the facial nerve.

Intracranial activation of the facial nerve is now possible with the noninvasive techniques of magnetic stimulation. Brief magnetic pulses generated by a coil overlying the parietal scalp elicit compound muscle action potentials of similar shape and amplitude and greater latency than those produced by electroneurography. Mapping studies demonstrate the compound muscle action potentials to be of...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later

Save to my library Already added to my library

{@ msg_add @}


Journal title

volume 11  issue 4

pages  341- 347

publication date 1998-02

By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.

Keywords

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023