Literature DB >> 19211898

Stability of output effects from motor cortex to forelimb muscles in primates.

Darcy M Griffin1, Heather M Hudson, Abderraouf Belhaj-Saïf, Paul D Cheney.   

Abstract

Stimulus-triggered averaging (StTA) of electromyographic (EMG) activity is a form of intracortical microstimulation that enables documentation in awake animals of the sign, magnitude, latency, and distribution of output effects from cortical and brainstem areas to motoneurons of different muscles. In this study, we show that the properties of effects in StTAs are stable and mostly independent of task conditions. StTAs of EMG activity from 24 forelimb muscles were collected from two male rhesus monkeys while they performed three tasks: (1) an isometric step tracking wrist task, (2) an isometric whole-arm push-pull task, and (3) a reach-to-grasp task. Layer V sites in primary motor cortex were identified and microstimuli were applied (15 muA) at a low rate (15 Hz). Our results show that the sign of effects (facilitation or suppression) in StTAs of EMG activity are remarkably stable in the presence of joint angle position changes (96% stable), whole-arm posture changes (97% stable), and across fundamentally different types of tasks such as arm push-pull versus reach-to-grasp (81% stable). Furthermore, comparing effects across different phases of a task also yielded remarkable stability (range, 84-96%). At different shoulder, elbow, and wrist angles, the magnitudes of effects in individual muscles were highly correlated. Our results demonstrate that M1 output effects obtained with StTA of EMG activity are highly stable across widely varying joint angles and motor tasks. This study further validates the use of StTA for mapping and other studies of cortical motor output.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19211898      PMCID: PMC2713178          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4831-08.2009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  36 in total

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5.  Computer simulation of post-spike facilitation in spike-triggered averages of rectified EMG.

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  10 in total

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2.  Cortical Effects on Ipsilateral Hindlimb Muscles Revealed with Stimulus-Triggered Averaging of EMG Activity.

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4.  Movement representation in the primary motor cortex and its contribution to generalizable EMG predictions.

Authors:  Emily R Oby; Christian Ethier; Lee E Miller
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2012-11-14       Impact factor: 2.714

5.  EMG activation patterns associated with high frequency, long-duration intracortical microstimulation of primary motor cortex.

Authors:  Darcy M Griffin; Heather M Hudson; Abderraouf Belhaj-Saïf; Paul D Cheney
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2014-01-29       Impact factor: 6.167

6.  Vulnerability of the medial frontal corticospinal projection accompanies combined lateral frontal and parietal cortex injury in rhesus monkey.

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7.  Muscle Synergies Obtained from Comprehensive Mapping of the Cortical Forelimb Representation Using Stimulus Triggered Averaging of EMG Activity.

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8.  Learning with slight forgetting optimizes sensorimotor transformation in redundant motor systems.

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Review 9.  Recovery after brain injury: mechanisms and principles.

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10.  Bottlenecks to clinical translation of direct brain-computer interfaces.

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