Comparing brain activation associated with isolated upper and lower limb movement across corresponding joints |
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Authors: | Luft Andreas R Smith Gerald V Forrester Larry Whitall Jill Macko Richard F Hauser Till-Karsten Goldberg Andrew P Hanley Daniel F |
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Affiliation: | Department of Neurology, University of Tübingen, Hoppe-Seyler-Strasse 3, 72076 Tübingen, Germany. aluft@anatom.uni-tuebingen.de |
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Abstract: | It was shown recently that functional activation across brain motor areas during locomotion and foot movements are similar but differ substantially from activation related to upper extremity movement (Miyai [2001]: Neuroimage 14:1186-1192). The activation pattern may be a function of the behavioral context of the movement rather than of its mechanical properties. We compare motor system activation patterns associated with isolated single-joint movement of corresponding joints in arm and leg carried out in equal frequency and range. Eleven healthy volunteers underwent BOLD-weighted fMRI while performing repetitive elbow or knee extension/flexion. To relate elbow and knee activation to the well-described patterns of finger movement, serial finger-to-thumb opposition was assessed in addition. After identifying task-related voxels using statistical parametric mapping, activation was measured in five regions of interest (ROI; primary motor [M1] and somatosensory cortex [S1], premotor cortex, supplementary motor area [SMA] divided into preSMA and SMA-proper, and cerebellum). Differences in the degree of activation across ROIs were found between elbow and knee movement. SMA-proper activation was prominent for knee, but almost absent for elbow movement (P < 0.05); finger movement produced small but constant SMA-proper activation. Ipsilateral M1 activation was detected during knee and finger movement, but was absent for the elbow task (P < 0.05). Knee movement showed less lateralization in M1 and S1 than other tasks (P < 0.05). The data demonstrate that central motor structures contribute differently to isolated elbow and knee movement. Activation during knee movement shows similarities to gait-related activation patterns. |
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Keywords: | sensorimotor cortex premotor cortex cerebellum supplementary motor area functional imaging brain activation |
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