| Literature DB >> 26696952 |
Madeleine E Hackney1, Ho Lim Lee2, Jessica Battisto2, Bruce Crosson3, Keith M McGregor3.
Abstract
Parkinson's disease is a neurodegenerative disorder that has received considerable attention in allopathic medicine over the past decades. However, it is clear that, to date, pharmacological and surgical interventions do not fully address symptoms of PD and patients' quality of life. As both an alternative therapy and as an adjuvant to conventional approaches, several types of rhythmic movement (e.g., movement strategies, dance, tandem biking, and Tai Chi) have shown improvements to motor symptoms, lower limb control, and postural stability in people with PD (1-6). However, while these programs are increasing in number, still little is known about the neural mechanisms underlying motor improvements attained with such interventions. Studying limb motor control under task-specific contexts can help determine the mechanisms of rehabilitation effectiveness. Both internally guided (IG) and externally guided (EG) movement strategies have evidence to support their use in rehabilitative programs. However, there appears to be a degree of differentiation in the neural substrates involved in IG vs. EG designs. Because of the potential task-specific benefits of rhythmic training within a rehabilitative context, this report will consider the use of IG and EG movement strategies, and observations produced by functional magnetic resonance imaging and other imaging techniques. This review will present findings from lower limb imaging studies, under IG and EG conditions for populations with and without movement disorders. We will discuss how these studies might inform movement disorders rehabilitation (in the form of rhythmic, music-based movement training) and highlight research gaps. We believe better understanding of lower limb neural activity with respect to PD impairment during rhythmic IG and EG movement will facilitate the development of novel and effective therapeutic approaches to mobility limitations and postural instability.Entities:
Keywords: Parkinson’s disease; externally cued; internally guided; lower limb; motor control; neuroimaging; rhythm
Year: 2015 PMID: 26696952 PMCID: PMC4667008 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2015.00251
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
A summary of the relevant imaging studies in the context of IG vs. EG movement in healthy controls and individuals with Parkinson’s disease.
| Reference | Population and | Internally guided or externally guided | Upper or lower limb movement | Task | Finding |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ( | 12 Healthy young | EG | Lower limb | Imagery and execution of ankle dorsiflexion | EG movement execution and motor imagery shared a common network, including the premotor, parietal and cingulate cortices, the striatum, and the cerebellum |
| ( | 4 Hemiparetic vs. 12 healthy subjects (25–70 years) | EG | Lower limb | Ankle dorsiflexion | EG-guided hemiparetic |
| ( | 20 PD patients; 10 healthy (non-age matched) | EG | Lower limb | Ankle dorsiflexion | PD-off: precentral gyrus, supplementary area, parietal opercular cortex, and ipsilateral cerebellum activated; PD-on: similar activation pattern as off, with additional activation of insular cortex; healthy-off: contralateral precentral gyrus, central opercular, cortex, and ipsilateral cerebellum; healthy-on: activations in precentral gyrus, central and parietal opercular cortex, cerebellum, and posterior cingulate cortex – no sig. increased activation in on vs. off for controls |
| ( | 8 Healthy (25–57 years) | EG | Lower limb | Ankle dorsiflexion vs. plantarflexion | EG dorsiflextion activated from medial M1S1 to SMA |
| ( | 16 Healthy young | EG | Lower limb | Ankle dorsiflexion vs. plantarflexion | Both right and left ankle active movements activated SMA, contralateral M1, and primary somatosensory cortex (SI) |
| ( | 13 PD, 13 age-matched healthy | IG | Lower limb | Gait imagery | During imagined movement, right dorsal premotor area (PMd), precentral, right inferior parietal lobule, and bilateral precuneus were more activated in PD compared to age-matched controls |
| ( | 18 Healthy young | IG and EG | Lower limb | Ankle dorsiflexion with and without visual cue | IG ankle movements has distinct network comprising the posterior parietal cortex and lateral cerebellar hemispheres |
| ( | 16 Healthy young | EG | Upper and lower limbs | Wrist and ankle flexion | Lower extremity EG more bilaterally active than upper extremity EG |
| ( | 24 Healthy young | EG | Upper and lower limbs | Foot and finger movement | Relative overlap of cortical recruitment in M1 and SMA for lower extremity and upper extremity movements |
| ( | 23 Healthy young | IG | Upper and lower limbs | Adduction and abduction of finger vs. adduction and abduction of foot | Cerebellum: overlap of activations for foot and finger movement |
| ( | 17 Healthy young, 21 healthy older | IG | Upper and lower limbs | Hand and foot flexion | Older adults recruited a more elaborate network of motor and non-motor regions younger adults |
| ( | 13 Healthy young | IG and EG | Upper and lower limbs | Finger vs. toe flexion | Finger and toe movements showed differential cerebellar recruitment; more bilateral during complex tasks |
| ( | 11 Healthy young | EG | Upper limb | Hand force production | Caudate nucleus is involved in planning motor force, but not force execution in EG tasks |
| ( | 10 Healthy young | EG | Upper limb | Finger button press and motor imagery | Cognitive and motor processes activate segregated areas of the cerebellum |
| ( | 9 Healthy young | EG | Upper limb | Finger tapping | EG finger tapping recruited cerebellum: right lobules IV–V and right lobules VIIIA and VIIIB |
| ( | 7 Healthy young | EG | Upper limb | Finger button press | Finger specific BOLD patterns showed overlapping sensory and motor representations in cerebellum |
| ( | 11 Healthy young | EG | Upper limb | Hand force production | Only the caudate nucleus increased activation when the subjects mapped force |
| ( | 10 PD; 10 age-matched healthy | EG | Upper limb | Hand force modulation | Off medication PD subjects have novel area recruitments of the bilateral cerebellum and primary motor cortex as compared to healthy adults |
| ( | 10 Healthy young | IG and EG | Upper limb | Drawing vs. tracing with hand | Results indicated that compared to tracing (EG), drawing (IG) generated greater activation in the right cerebellar crus I, bilateral pre-SMA, right dorsal premotor cortex, and right frontal eye field |
| ( | 32 PD patients; 16 w/FOG, 16 w/o FOG | IG | Upper limb | Finger flexion | An upper extremity task reveals differential striatocortical involvement for successful movements with PD patients with and without FOG |
| ( | 14 Healthy young | IG and EG | Upper limb | Finger button press | Our results show that the putamen is particularly involved in the execution of non-routine movements, especially if those are self-initiated |
| ( | 6 PD and 6 healthy | IG and EG | Upper limb | Finger flexion during positron emission tomography | Compared to PD patients, healthy adults showed greater activation of SMA and anterior cingulate, left putamen, left insular cortex, right DLPFC, and right parietal area 40 |
| ( | 12 Healthy young | IG and EG | Upper limb | Phasic movements of hand vs. foot | During EG, the hMT/V5+, the superior parietal cortex, the premotor cortex, the thalamus, and cerebellar lobule VI showed higher activation. During IG: the basal ganglia, the SMA, cingulate motor cortex, the inferior parietal, frontal operculum, and cerebellar lobule IV–V/dentate nucleus showed increased activity |
| ( | 5 PD and 5 age-matched healthy | IG and EG | Upper limb | Finger tapping | PD patients showed increased recruitment of ipsilateral CTC circuit during EG task than healthy older adults |
| ( | 10 PD; 10 age-matched healthy | IG and EG | Upper limb | Finger tapping | Differential activation between PD and older adults during synchronous movements |
| ( | 10 PD; 13 age-matched healthy | IG and EG | Upper limb | Finger tapping | Eg movement showed decreased activation in the M1S1, cerebellum, and medial premotor system in PD subjects compared to healthy controls |
| ( | 10 Healthy young | IG and EG | Upper limb | Hand force production | IG: anterior basal ganglia more heavily recruited; EG: cerebellum more heavily recruited |
| ( | 35 Healthy (21–67 years) | IG and EG | Upper limb | Finger flexion | Differential recruitment of CBGT and CTC circuits respective of mapping of “what” or “when” during IG vs. EG tasks |
Figure 1A representative synopsis of the connectivity reported in the current review comparing neural connectivity in internally guided vs. externally guided movements. The top panel represents connectivity within internally guided movements whose initiation from cortical regions (SMA, M1, and CMA) is mediated by the striatum (caudate for movement selection; putamen for execution) and thalamo-cerebellar bidirectional processing for movement execution. By contrast, the bottom panel represents connectivity during externally guided movements, which originate from sensorimotor integration (M1S1, SMA, and precuneus) due to the external cue for initiation. The progression of motor execution engages the lentiform nuclei (putamen, GP), which then influence cortico-thalamo- cerebellar processing during task execution. Abbreviations: SMA, supplementary motor area; M1, primary motor cortex; S1, primary somatosensory cortex; STN, subthalamic nucleus; CMA, cingulate motor area; GP, globus pallidus; Thal, thalamus.