| Literature DB >> 27895590 |
Wan X Yao1, Zhiguo Jiang2, Jinqi Li3, Changhao Jiang4, Crystal G Franlin3, Jack L Lancaster3, Yufei Huang1, Guang H Yue2.
Abstract
Previous studies report greater activation in the cortical motor network in controlling eccentric contraction (EC) than concentric contraction (CC) of human skeletal muscles despite lower activation level of the muscle associated with EC. It is unknown, however, whether the strength of functional coupling between the primary motor cortex (M1) and other involved areas in the brain differs as voluntary movements are controlled by a network of regions in the primary, secondary and association cortices. Examining fMRI-based functional connectivity (FC) offers an opportunity to measure strength of such coupling. To address the question, we examined functional MRI (fMRI) data acquired during EC and CC (20 contractions each with similar movement distance and speed) of the right first dorsal interosseous (FDI) muscle in 11 young (20-32 years) and healthy individuals and estimated FC between the M1 and a number of cortical regions in the motor control network. The major findings from the mechanical and fMRI-based FC analysis were that (1) no significant differences were seen in movement distance, speed and stability between the EC and CC; (2) significantly stronger mean FC was found for CC than EC. Our finding provides novel insights for a better understanding of the control mechanisms underlying voluntary movements produced by EC and CC. The finding is potentially helpful for guiding the development of targeted sport training and/or therapeutic programs for performance enhancement and injury prevention.Entities:
Keywords: brain functional connectivity; concentric contraction; eccentric contraction; fMRI
Year: 2016 PMID: 27895590 PMCID: PMC5108928 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2016.00521
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Figure 1An illustration of the experimental setup. It shows a top view of the setup. As indicated by the two thin arrows in the left panel, the concentric contraction involved the index finger moved away from the middle finger (muscle shortening), in which the FDI muscle force was greater than the external resisting force, and the eccentric contraction involved the index finger moved toward the middle finger (muscle lengthening), which was a result of a greater external force than the force produced by the FDI muscle.
Figure 2Functional connectivity maps during concentric and eccentric contractions. Axial slices of mean functional connectivity maps during concentric and eccentric muscle contractions (FEW corrected p < 0.01). The color bar indicates the raw T-value from the one sample T-test of the group mean of all 11 individual connectivity maps. Large overlapping areas of both connectivity maps can be observed (indicated by pink clusters).
Figure 3Brain regions showing strengthened functional connectivity during concentric contractions compared to eccentric contractions (CC-EC). Axial slices of brain clusters showing higher functional connectivity (uncorrected p < 0.01) during concentric than eccentric muscle contractions. The color bar indicates the raw T-value from the paired sample T-test. A wide spread regions including the left supplementary motor cortex (SMA) and cerebellum were found to have strengthened connectivity with the seed region (left M1).
Brain regions with strengthened FC during CC compared to EC.
| Left inferior parietal | −38 | −36 | 44 | 144 |
| Left cerebelum | −28 | −72 | −22 | 408 |
| Left post central | −36 | −26 | 56 | 144 |
| Posterior cingulate gyrus | 0 | −34 | 28 | 128 |
| Left precuneus | −2 | −60 | 36 | 88 |
| Right parietal lobe | 16 | −56 | 64 | 88 |
Figure 4Brain regions showing strengthened functional connectivity during eccentric contractions compared to concentric contractions (EC-CC). Axial slices showing only ONE brain cluster with higher functional connectivity (uncorrected p < 0.01) during eccentric muscle contractions than concentric muscle contractions. The color bar indicates the raw T-value from the paired sample T-test.
Brain regions with strengthened FC during EC compared to CC.
| Right postcentral | 44 | −16 | 38 | 80 |