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1.
We studied the influence of contralateral and ipsilateral cutaneous digital nerve stimulation on motor evoked potentials (MEPs) elicited in hand muscles by transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). We tested the effect of different magnetic stimulus intensities on MEPs recorded from the thenar eminence (TE) muscles of the right hand while an electrical conditioning stimulus was delivered to the second finger of the same hand with an intensity four times above the sensory threshold. Amplitude decrement of conditioned MEPs as a function of magnetic stimulus intensity was observed. The lowest TMS stimulus intensity produced the largest decrease in conditioned MEPs. Moreover, we investigated the effects of ipsilateral and contralateral electrical digital stimulation on MEPs elicited in the right TE and biceps muscle using an intensity 10% above the threshold. Marked MEP inhibition in TE muscles following both ipsilateral and contralateral digital stimulation is the main finding of this study. The decrease in conditioned MEP amplitude to ipsilateral stimulation reached a level of 50% of unconditioned MEP amplitude with the circular coil and 30% with the focal coil. The amplitude of conditioned MEPs to contralateral digital stimulation showed a decrease of 60% with the circular coil and more than 50% with the focal coil. The onset of the inhibitory effect of contralateral stimulation using the focal coil occurred at a mean of 15 ms later than that of ipsilateral stimulation. No MEP inhibition was observed when recording from proximal muscles. Ipsilateral and contralateral digital stimulation had no effect on F wave at appropriate interstimulus intervals, where the main MEP suppression was noted. We stress the importance of selecting an appropriate test stimulus intensity to evaluate MEP inhibition by digital nerves stimulation. Spinal and cortical sites of sensorimotor integration are adduced to explain the direct and crossed MEP inhibition following digital nerves stimulation.  相似文献   

2.
We recently demonstrated that a long-lasting transmission defect in cortical synapses caused motor dysfunction after brief middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion in the rat despite rapid recovery of axons. In this experimental study, we have examined the impact of differential recovery of synapses and axons on generation of motor-evoked potentials (MEP) recorded from contralateral paralyzed and ipsilateral unaffected muscles, to gain insight into mechanisms of MEPs recorded from stroke patients by transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). MEPs generated by focal electrical stimulation of the forelimb area of motor cortex were simultaneously recorded from the brain stem, contra- and ipsilateral forelimb and contralateral hindlimb muscles in rats subjected to transient MCA occlusion. The effect of ischemia on cortical activity and axonal conduction was differentially studied by proximal or distal occlusion of the MCA. Regional cerebral blood flow changes in the forelimb area were monitored by laser-Doppler flowmetry during ischemia and reperfusion. In addition, synaptic transmission within the forelimb area of motor cortex was examined by intracellular and extracellular recording of potentials generated by stimulation of the premotor area. No MEP response was recorded during ischemia. Upon reperfusion: (i) motor axons readily regained their excitability and cortical stimulation caused successive pyramidal volleys (recorded as D waves from the brain stem) and a MEP from contralateral paralytic muscles although synaptic activation of motor pathways was not feasible; (ii) the amplitude of pyramidal volley was increased; (iii) MEPs with a longer latency were recorded from the ipsilateral forelimb. In conclusion, differential recovery of synapses and axons after ischemia may account for some previously unexplained findings (such as preserved MEPs in paralysed muscles) observed in cortical stimulation studies of stroke patients.  相似文献   

3.
Motor recovery following stroke: a transcranial magnetic stimulation study.   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
OBJECTIVES: To verify the usefulness of early recording of motor evoked potentials (MEPs) in predicting motor outcome after stroke and to investigate the neural mechanisms underlying functional recovery following stroke. METHODS: We performed a comparative analysis of the behaviour of motor responses evoked by transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) of the ipsilateral and contralateral motor cortex in the affected and unaffected thenar muscles of 21 consecutive patients with acute stroke. RESULTS: According to the behaviour of MEPs in the affected muscles, patients could be divided into 3 groups: (a) 10 subjects with absent responses to TMS of both the damaged and undamaged hemisphere, whose motor recovery was poor and related to the size of MEPs on the normal side; (b) 5 subjects with larger MEPs upon TMS of the ipsilateral (undamaged) than of the contralateral (damaged) cortex, whose good recovery possibly resulted from the emergence of ipsilateral pathways; (c) 6 subjects with larger MEPs in the affected than in the unaffected muscles, whose good recovery was possibly subserved by alternative circuits taking over cortical deafferentation. CONCLUSIONS: Early MEP recording in acute stroke provides useful information on the clinical prognosis and the different mechanisms of motor recovery.  相似文献   

4.
Effects of transcranial magnetic stimulation on ipsilateral muscles   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
E M Wassermann  P Fuhr  L G Cohen  M Hallett 《Neurology》1991,41(11):1795-1799
We studied the effects of transcranial magnetic stimulation of the motor cortex on ipsilateral upper extremity muscles in six normal men. Stimulation had inhibitory and excitatory effects on the muscles during voluntary activation. Transient inhibition, an ipsilateral silent period (ISP), occurred in all muscles tested, often without any preceding excitatory response. Motor evoked potentials (MEPs) occurred ipsilaterally in the proximal muscles of some subjects. Ipsilateral MEPs and ISPs were delayed relative to the MEPs evoked by the same stimulus in the corresponding contralateral muscles. The excitability of the alpha motoneuron pool, assessed during the period of the ISP by eliciting H-reflexes, showed no change, suggesting that ipsilateral inhibition acts at a level above the alpha motoneuron. Connections from motor cortex to ipsilateral muscles could be via the corpus callosum and contralateral hemisphere or via purely ipsilateral pathways.  相似文献   

5.
目的:观察磁刺激运动诱发肌电位对运动机能的评价。方法:用磁刺激装置对正常人12例,运动障碍患者31例进行了经颅脑刺激,记录运动诱发肌电位。结果:受检测的43例,无一例引起头痛和感觉异常,也无癫痫及意识障碍等副作用。正常人中,诱发肌电位的潜伏期相对恒定,振幅在个体间虽存有差异,但同一例左右侧几乎相同。对20例单侧肢体功能障碍的肌力按体征分级,比较患侧和健侧的诱发肌电位,发现患侧振幅较健侧明显减低。对肌力0~2级的病例,不能诱发出肌电位。结论:磁刺激运动诱发肌电位,在临床上可在数量上正确评价肢体的运动机能,并且经颅磁刺激法是安全的。  相似文献   

6.
Role of the ipsilateral motor cortex in mirror movements.   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
The mechanism of mirror movements in two patients was investigated; one with congenital mirror movement, the other with schizencephaly. Transcranial magnetic stimulation on one side elicited motor evoked potentials (MEPs) in their thenar muscles on both sides with almost the same latencies, minimal thresholds, and cortical topographies. During voluntary contraction of the thenar muscle on one side, contralateral transcranial magnetic stimulation induced a silent period not only on the voluntary contraction side but on the mirror movement side and of the same duration. By contrast, ipsilateral transcranial magnetic stimulation elicited MEPs without silent periods in both muscles. With intended unilateral finger movements, an H2(15)O-PET activation study showed that the regional cerebral blood flow increased predominantly in the contralateral sensorimotor cortex, as seen in normal subjects, although mirror movements occurred. It is considered that the ipsilateral motor cortex plays a major part in the generation of mirror movements, which may be induced through the ipsilateral uncrossed corticospinal tract.  相似文献   

7.
Hand motor representation area expands towards the area of the perioral facial motor cortex in patients with peripheral facial paralysis (PFP) and in hemifacial spasm cases treated with botulinum toxin. In this current study, we aimed to investigate the changes both in the ipsilateral and contralateral facial motor cortex areas in patients with PFP with transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). Thirty healthy individuals and 41 patients with unilateral PFP with partial or total axonal degeneration participated in this study. Motor evoked potentials (MEPs) of perioral muscles elicited by TMS of the intracranial portion of the facial nerve and motor cortex, were recorded. TMS was delivered through a figure-of-eight coil. Mapping of the cortical representation of perioral muscles were also studied in 13 of 41 patients and in 10 of control subjects. Mean amplitude of the intact perioral MEPs elicited by the ipsilateral hemisphere TMS, was significantly higher in patients than the control subjects. There was also a mild enlargement of the mean cortical representation area of intact perioral muscles on both hemispheres though it was not significant. We have concluded that there was a cortical reorganization in the hemisphere contralateral to the paralytic side resulting in an increase at corticofugal output related to intact perioral muscles.  相似文献   

8.
Morphological and behavioural changes in back muscles are common in back pain and injury. Recent data indicate a rapid reduction in the size of the multifidus, a deep back muscle, within 3 days of experimental intervertebral disc (IVD) injury in pigs. A reduced neural drive may contribute to this. We investigated changes in corticomotor excitability following IVD lesion by evaluation of the response of back muscles to electrical stimulation of the motor cortex. Motor evoked potentials (MEPs) were studied in 12 Swedish landrace pigs before injury, immediately after abdominal incision, immediately after L3-4 IVD lesion with a scalpel, and 15 min later. In two animals, responses were also evoked by descending volleys excited at the level of the mastoid processes (cervicomedullary evoked potentials) without motor cortex activation. In five animals, a sham procedure was followed without IVD lesion. MEPs were recorded in short (deep) and long (superficial) fibres of the multifidus at L3-5 on the lesioned side and at L4 contralaterally with intramuscular wire electrodes. Although the MEP amplitude increased in several muscles after incision, at 15 min after IVD lesion only the MEP amplitude of the deep L4 multifidus on the lesioned side was increased [36% (SD 15%), P  < 0.05]. There were no changes in MEP amplitude after 15 min at adjacent or contralateral levels. The response to cervicomedullary stimulation reduced slightly. This suggests that the increased MEP amplitude was due to changes in cortical excitability. These data indicate that IVD lesion induces localized increases, and not decreases, in the excitability of cortical inputs to the deep paraspinal muscles that cross a lesioned disc.  相似文献   

9.
Motor evoked potentials (MEPs) to transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) increase in amplitude when obtained immediately after a period of exercise of the target muscle (postexercise facilitation). We studied postexercise facilitation of MEPs to TMS after periods of voluntary activation of either the ipsilateral or contralateral primary motor cortex (simple finger movements) or supplementary motor area (complex finger movements). Postexercise facilitation of the first dorsal interosseous MEPs occurred ipsilaterally even after simple, unilateral finger movements of the dominant hand. The findings are taken to suggest transcallosal transfer of excitability from the dominant to nondominant cerebral hemisphere, perhaps related to mechanisms involved in bimanual motor coordination.  相似文献   

10.
OBJECTIVES: In order to learn more about the physiology of the motor cortex during motor imagery, we evaluated the changes in excitability of two different hand muscle representations in the primary motor cortex (M1) of both hemispheres during two imagery conditions. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We applied focal transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) over each M1, recording motor evoked potentials (MEPs) from the contralateral abductor pollicis brevis (APB) and first dorsal interosseus (FDI) muscles during rest, imagery of contralateral thumb abduction (C-APB), and imagery of ipsilateral thumb abduction (I-APB). We obtained measures of motor threshold (MT), MEP recruitment curve (MEP-rc) and F waves. RESULTS: Motor imagery compared with rest significantly decreased the MT and increased MEPs amplitude at stimulation intensities clearly above MT in condition C-APB, but not in condition I-APB. These effects were not significantly different between right and left hemisphere. MEPs simultaneously recorded from the FDI, which was not involved in the task, did not show facilitatory effects. There were no significant changes in F wave amplitude during motor imagery compared with rest. CONCLUSIONS: Imagery of unilateral simple movements is associated with increased excitability only of a highly specific representation in the contralateral M1 and does not differ between hemispheres.  相似文献   

11.
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the intracortical inhibitory and excitatory systems in the motor cortical representation of upper and lower facial muscles. METHODS: Paired-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) was applied to 7 healthy volunteers, with the interstimulus interval (ISI) between the conditioning stimulus (CS) and test stimulus, varied from 1 to 20 ms. CS was set at 90% of motor threshold. Muscle evoked potentials (MEPs) were recorded from first dorsal interosseus (FDI), orbicularis oculi (o. oculi) and mentalis muscles. RESULT: TMS evoked MEPs in o. oculi on both ipsi- and contralateral sides in all subjects. In the paired-pulse study, MEP amplitude in the mentalis decreased at short ISIs of 1-3 ms, followed by increases at 12-20 ms. These effects were similar to those in the FDI. O. oculi did not show a distinct inhibitory period at short ISIs and facilitation at long ISIs was detected but was significantly less than in FDI and mentalis. In o. oculi, there was no significant difference between the effects of ipsilateral and contralateral CS on the MEPs. CONCLUSION: The bi-hemispheric control of volitional movement and the modulation from brainstem projections appear to markedly influence intracortical inhibitory and excitatory systems in the motor cortical representation of o. oculi.  相似文献   

12.
Influence of the adequate vestibular stimulation by tilting about the longitudinal axis on the locomotor activity of forelimb muscles was investigated in precollicularly decerebrated guinea pigs. The locomotor activity was evoked by electrical stimulation of the mesencephalic locomotor region. An increase of the extensor activity in the stance phase and a decrease of the flexor activity in the swing phase on the limb ipsilateral to the tilt and opposite changes of the antagonist muscles activity on the limb contralateral to the tilt were observed during animal movements. It is found that during the sinusoidal tilting in the frequency range of 0.02-0.4 Hz changes in the locomotor activity lead the animal displacement: 60-40--in extensors, 40-20 degrees--in flexors. Mechanisms of the vestibular control of the locomotor activity are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
How the human brain controls activation of the ipsilateral part of midline muscles is unknown. We studied corticospinal and corticocortical network excitability of both ipsilateral and contralateral motor representations of the tongue to determine whether they are under analogous or disparate inhibitory and facilitatory corticocortical control. Motor evoked potentials (MEPs) to unilateral focal transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) of the tongue primary motor cortex were recorded simultaneously from the ipsilateral and contralateral lingual muscles. Single-pulse TMS was used to assess motor threshold (MT) and MEP recruitment. Paired-pulse TMS was used to study intracortical inhibition (ICI) and intracortical facilitation (ICF) at various interstimulus intervals (ISIs) between the conditioning stimulus (CS) and the test stimulus (TS), and at different CS and TS intensities, respectively. Focal TMS invariably produced MEPs in both ipsilateral and contralateral lingual muscles. MT was lower and MEP recruitment was steeper when recorded from the contralateral muscle group. ICI and ICF were identical in the ipsilateral and contralateral representations, with inhibition occurring at short ISIs (2 and 3 ms) and facilitation occurring at longer ISIs (10 and 15 ms). Moreover, changing one stimulus parameter regularly produced analogous changes in MEP size bilaterally, revealing strong linear correlations between ipsilateral and contralateral ICI and ICF (P < 0.0001). These findings indicate that the ipsilateral and contralateral representations of the tongue are under analogous inhibitory and facilitatory control, possibly by a common intracortical network.  相似文献   

14.
The study investigated the potential for stimulation of both motor cortices during transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to evoke abdominal muscle responses. Electromyographic activity (EMG) of transversus abdominis (TrA) was recorded bilaterally in eleven healthy volunteers using fine-wire electrodes. TMS at 120% motor threshold (MT) was delivered at rest and during 10% activation at 1 cm intervals from the midline to 5 cm lateral, along a line 2 cm anterior to the vertex. The optimal site to evoke responses in TrA is located 2 cm lateral to the vertex. When bilateral abdominal responses were evoked at or lateral to this site, onset of ipsilateral motor evoked potentials (MEPs) were 3–4 ms longer than contralateral MEPs. The difference between latencies is consistent with activation of faster crossed-, and slower uncrossed-corticospinal pathways from one hemisphere. However, latencies of MEPs were similar between sides when stimulation was applied more medially and were consistent with concurrent activation of crossed corticospinal tracts on both sides. The findings suggest that stimulation of both motor cortices is possible when TMS is delivered less than 2 cm from midline. Concurrent stimulation of both motor cortices can be minimised if TMS is delivered at least 2 cm lateral to midline.  相似文献   

15.
In high spinal cats propriospinal pathways ascending from lumbo-sacral levels of the spinal cord can mediate strong excitatory and inhibitory changes in reflexes to different groups of motoneurones supplying muscles of the forelimb. Discharges evoked by electrical stimulation of hindlimb nerves could be evoked in 41% of experiments in the motoneurones of pectoralis major and minor. The latency of the discharge (8–18 msec) could be shortened by increasing the repetition frequency of the stimulus, the greatest reduction occurring in the range 1–4 Hz. Contralateral hindlimb nerves were less effective and the discharge generally occurred at a latency 1–2 msec longer than for ipsilateral nerves.Monosynaptic reflexes to pectoralis major and deep radial motoneurones supplying the physiological flexor muscles were strongly facilitated by hindlimb nerve stimulation, ipsilateral nerves being more effective than contralateral. Monosynaptic reflexes to latissimus dorsi showed a reciprocal pattern of conditioning, being depressed by ipsilateral and facilitated by contralateral hindlimb extensor nerves, the flexor nerves giving the reverse pattern. Monosynaptic reflexes to median and ulnar nerves supplying physiological extensor muscles were not significantly affected by hindlimb nerve conditioning.Polysynaptic reflexes to pectoralis major and deep radial motoneurones received initial strong facilitation followed by prolonged depression, ipsilateral hindlimb nerves being more effective than contralateral. In latissimus dorsi a reciprocal pattern similar to that for monosynaptic reflex testing was found. Polysynaptic reflexes to median and ulnar motoneurones received only prolonged depression.The hindlimb afferent nerves responsible for the discharge in forelimb motoneurones and for the facilitation and depression of forelimb reflexes include groups II and II muscle afferents and group II skin afferents, especially from quadriceps and sartorius muscles, and sural and superficial peroneal nerves, respectively.The ascending long propriospinal pathways are influenced bilaterally from hindlimb nerves and are located in the lower thoracic segments in the ventrolateral funiculus. The pathways mediate effects on ipsilateral and contralateral forelimb reflex systems, the ipsilateral projections being dominant. Part of the long ascending projection terminates monosynaptically on the motoneurones of pectoralis major. It is likely that group II afferents from ipsilateral quadriceps muscle activate the ascending tract monosynaptically and those from contralateral quadriceps disynaptically.The hypothesis is suggested that long propriospinal paths primarily represent intrinsic links between hindlimb and forelimb ‘motor centres’. The pattern of long ascending influences to groups of forelimb motoneurones corresponds closely to the sequences of hindlimb and forelimb stepping observed in normal cats. A functional role in stepping is therefore proposed for long ascending propriospinal pathways.  相似文献   

16.
Two male patients (a child and an adult) with congenital mirror movement were studied using functional MRI (fMRI) and transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). Bilateral primary sensorimotor cortices were activated during unilateral hand gripping on fMRI when the child patient was 8 years old andthe adult was 37 years old. Bilateral motor evoked potentials were induced from the hand and forearm muscles after TMS of each hemisphere. Bilateral motor responses were also induced from the arm muscles in the adult patient. Bilateral motor responses had short and similar latencies. Contralateral motor responses to TMS were smaller than ipsilateral ones in the hand muscles, while contralateral responses were larger than ipsilateral ones in the arm muscles. Contralateral hand motor responses reduced in amplitude or disappeared with increasing age while in the child patient, mirror movements decreased gradually. Our results suggest that bilateral activation of the primary sensorimotor cortices during intended unilateral hand movement and bilateral motor responses to TMS account, at least in part, for the pathophysiology of congenital mirror movement. Reduction of contralateral hand motor responses may be related to the decrease in mirror movements during development.  相似文献   

17.
A typical pathophysiological abnormality in dystonia is cocontraction of antagonist muscles, with impaired reciprocal inhibitory mechanisms in the spinal cord. Recent experimental data have shown that inhibitory interactions between antagonist muscles have also a parallel control at the level of the sensorimotor cortex. The aim of this work was to study heteronymous effects of a median nerve stimulus on the corticospinal projections to forearm muscles in dystonia. We used the technique of antagonist cortical inhibition, which assesses the conditioning effect of median nerve afferent input on motor evoked potentials (MEPs) elicited by transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) in ipsilateral forearm extensor muscles at rest. Nine healthy subjects and 10 patients with torsion dystonia participated in the study. MEPs and somatosensory evoked potentials were normal in patients. In healthy subjects, median nerve stimulation at 15- to 18-msec intervals inhibited the test MEPs in forearm extensors. In dystonic patients, median nerve stimulation delivered at the same conditioning-test intervals elicited significantly less inhibition of the test MEP. On the whole, these data suggest an impaired sensory-motor integration in dystonia and, more specifically, the decreased antagonistic cortical inhibition could suggest that functional interactions between antagonist muscles are primarily impaired at the cortical level.  相似文献   

18.
《Clinical neurophysiology》2010,121(1):104-108
ObjectivesTo approximate methods for human transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) in rats, we tested whether lateralized cortical stimulation resulting in selective activation of one forelimb contralateral to the site of stimulation could be achieved by TMS in the rat.MethodsMotor evoked potentials (MEP) were recorded from the brachioradialis muscle bilaterally in adult male anesthetized rats (n = 13). A figure-of-eight TMS coil was positioned lateral to midline. TMS intensity was increased stepwise from subthreshold intensities to maximal machine output in order to generate input–output curves and to determine the motor threshold (MT) for brachioradialis activation.ResultsIn 100% of the animals, selective activation of the contralateral brachioradialis, in the absence of ipsilateral brachioradialis activation was achieved, and the ipsilateral brachioradialis was activated only at TMS intensities exceeding contralateral forelimb MT. With increasing TMS intensity, the amplitudes of both the ipsilateral and contralateral signals increased in proportion to TMS strength. However, the input–output curves for the contralateral and ipsilateral brachioradialis were significantly different (p < 0.001) such that amplitude of the ipsilateral MEP was reliably lower than the contralateral signal.ConclusionsWe demonstrate that lateralized TMS leading to asymmetric brachioradialis activation is feasible with conventional TMS equipment in anesthetized rats.SignificanceThese data show that TMS can be used to assess the unilateral excitability of the forelimb descending motor pathway in the rat, and suggest that rat TMS protocols analogous to human TMS may be applied in future translational research.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract

Electrical stimulation over the motor cortexl base ofthe skulll and cervical spine motor roots was performed in 9 male rats (41 0 ± 86 g) before and after induction with isoflurane at 7 MAC concentration. The mean latency and amplitude of descending spinal evoked potential (OSEP) from spinal cord and motor evoked potentials (MEPs) from forearm muscles obtained after motor cortexl brainsteml and cervical root stimulations were calculated and compared. The electrical current intensity to elicit the MEPs after corticall brainsteml and spinal roots stimulation were 23.4 ± 7.61 7.0 ± 3.71 and 7.4 ± 0.8 mAl respectively. The brainstem stimulation activated descending motor pathways with a latency midway between that produced by electrical stimulation over the motor cOrtexI and by electrical stimulation over the cervical enlargements. The latency difference between cortical (8.8 ± 3.2 msec) and brainstem (5.7 ± 7.2 msec) stimulation was 3.7 ± 2.3 msec in all forearm extensor muscles. The latency difference between cervical (3.6 ± 0.9 msec) and brainstem stimulation (5.7 ± 7.2 msec) was 2.3 ± 7.7 msec for the same musclesl suggesting the brainstem stimulation activates the descending motor neurons at the level of cervicalmedullary junction. The amplitudes were 789 ± 7471 672 ± 3541 and 765 ± 389 µV for corticall brainsteml and cervical root stimulations. The inhalation anesthesia isoflurane at 7MAC (7.2%) completely abolished the cortical and brainstem MEPs within minutesl while the MEPs elicited by direct stimulation of the cervical spinal roots remained unchanged. Our results indicate synaptic-dependent MEPs elicited at motor cortex or brainstem levels are highly sensitive to isoflurane anesthesia. [Neural Res 1998; 20: 555-558]  相似文献   

20.
In the rat, non-invasive transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) has shown promise for evaluation of transmission through the spinal cord before and after repair strategies, but it is still unclear which pathways are activated by TMS. The aim of the present study was therefore to identify these pathways and to analyse the effect of TMS on spinal neurons. In 19 rats, TMS evoked responses bilaterally in forelimb (biceps brachii; BB) and hindlimb muscles (tibialis anterior). The latency and amplitude of these motor-evoked responses (MEPs) were highly variable and depended strongly on the coil position and the stimulation intensity. The most frequently observed latencies for the BB MEPs could be divided into three groups: 3-6 ms, 8-12 ms and 14-18 ms. Lesions in the dorsal columns, which destroyed the corticospinal tract at C2 and C5, significantly depressed MEPs in the mid- and high-latency ranges, but not those in the low-latency range. Lesions in the dorsolateral funiculus, which interrupted the rubrospinal tract, had no effect on MEPs in any of the latency ranges. By contrast, bilateral lesion of the reticulospinal tract and other ventro-laterally located descending pathways abolished all responses. Intracellular recordings from 54 cervical motoneurons in five rats revealed that TMS evoked excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) at latencies that corresponded well with those of the BB MEPs. The short-latency EPSPs had rise times of around 1 ms, suggesting that they were mediated by a monosynaptic pathway. EPSPs with longer latencies had considerably longer rise times, which indicated conduction through polysynaptic pathways. Selective electrical stimulation of the pyramidal tract in the brainstem was performed in seven rats, where intracellular recordings from 70 motoneurons revealed that the earliest EPSPs and MEPs evoked by TMS were not mediated by the corticospinal tract, but by other descending motor pathways. Together, these results showed that in the rat TMS activates several descending pathways that converge on common spinal interneurons and motoneurons. Our observations confirm that the corticospinal tract has weak (and indirect) projections to cervical spinal motoneurons.  相似文献   

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