نتایج جستجو برای: pyramidal tracts

تعداد نتایج: 27462  

2005
KEIRO ONO SOHEI EBARA TAKESHI FUJI KAZUO YONENOBU KEIJU FUJIWARA KAZUO YAMASHITA

A characteristic dysfunction ofthe hand has been observed in various cervical spinal disorders when there is involvement of the spinal cord. There is loss of power of adduction and extension of the ulnar two or three fingers and an inability to grip and release rapidly with these fingers. These changes have been termed “myelopathy hand” and appear to be due to pyramidal tract involvement. The c...

Journal: :Neurology 2012
Theodor Rüber Gottfried Schlaug Robert Lindenberg

OBJECTIVES Studies on nonhuman primates have demonstrated that the cortico-rubro-spinal system can compensate for damage to the pyramidal tract (PT). In humans, so-called alternate motor fibers (aMF), which may comprise the cortico-rubro-spinal tract, have been suggested to play a similar role in motor recovery after stroke. Using diffusion tensor imaging, we examined PT and aMF in the context ...

Journal: :Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry 2005
G Thomalla V Glauche C Weiller J Röther

Wallerian degeneration (WD) after ischaemic stroke is a well known phenomenon following a stereotypical time course. Whereas conventional magnetic resonance imaging fails to detect signal intensity changes until four weeks after stroke, diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) reveals changes related to WD only after days. DTI was used to monitor the time course of Wallerian degeneration of the pyramidal...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2012
Marsha M Quallo Alexander Kraskov Roger N Lemon

It has been suggested that the distinctive capacity of some nonhuman primates to use tools may reflect a well-developed corticospinal system and, in particular, direct cortico-motoneuronal (CM) connections to hand muscles. We investigated the activity of corticospinal neurons in the primary motor cortex hand area during the use of a tool by two adult macaque monkeys. They used a light rake to r...

Journal: :American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology 2013
Michael J Farrell David Trevaks Nigel A S Taylor Robin M McAllen

Functional MRI was used to identify regions in the human brain stem activated during thermal and psychogenic sweating. Two groups of healthy participants aged 34.4 ± 10.2 and 35.3 ± 11.8 years (both groups comprising 1 woman and 10 men) were either heated by a water-perfused tube suit or subjected to a Stroop test, while they lay supine with their head in a 3-T MRI scanner. Sweating events were...

Journal: :Neuroscience research 1999
K Huda T L Salunga S A Chowdhury T Kawashima K Matsunami

The effects of dopamine (DA) and its antagonists on the transcallosal activity of pyramidal tract neurons (PTNs) and non-PTNs in the anesthetized cat motor cortex were studied with iontophoretic applications; dopamine, SCH 23390 (D1 antagonist), sulpiride (D2 antagonist) and haloperidol. Neuronal activity was recorded with a multi-barreled glass microelectrode. Transcallosal neuronal activity w...

Journal: :Brain research 1972
R J Schwartzman

Ten Macaca mulatta monkeys were operantly conditioned to perform three motor paradigms designed to evaluate single and combination finger movements. Eight of these monkeys were retested after left medullary pyramidotomy; 2 monkeys underwent left medullary pyramidotomy prior to conditioning. All animals were tested for three years after operation. Monkeys with a completely sectioned medullary py...

Journal: :Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences 2005
Geoffrey J M Parker Daniel C Alexander

Recently developed methods to extract the persistent angular structure (PAS) of axonal fibre bundles from diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data are applied to drive probabilistic fibre tracking, designed to provide estimates of anatomical cerebral connectivity. The behaviour of the PAS function in the presence of realistic data noise is modelled for a range of single and mult...

Journal: :Stroke 1999
J B Green Y Bialy E Sora A Ricamato

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Multimodal neuroimaging with positron emission tomography (PET) scanning or functional MRI can detect and display functional reorganization of the brain's motor control in poststroke hemiplegia. We undertook a study to determine whether the new modality of 128-electrode high-resolution EEG, coregistered with MRI, could detect changes in cortical motor control in patients ...

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