| Literature DB >> 28981644 |
Colin M McCrimmon1, Po T Wang1, Payam Heydari2, Angelica Nguyen3, Susan J Shaw4,5, Hui Gong4,5, Luis A Chui6, Charles Y Liu7,8,9, Zoran Nenadic1,2, An H Do6.
Abstract
While prior noninvasive (e.g., electroencephalographic) studies suggest that the human primary motor cortex (M1) is active during gait processes, the limitations of noninvasive recordings make it impossible to determine whether M1 is involved in high-level motor control (e.g., obstacle avoidance, walking speed), low-level motor control (e.g., coordinated muscle activation), or only nonmotor processes (e.g., integrating/relaying sensory information). This study represents the first invasive electroneurophysiological characterization of the human leg M1 during walking. Two subjects with an electrocorticographic grid over the interhemispheric M1 area were recruited. Both exhibited generalized γ-band (40-200 Hz) synchronization across M1 during treadmill walking, as well as periodic γ-band changes within each stride (across multiple walking speeds). Additionally, these changes appeared to be of motor, rather than sensory, origin. However, M1 activity during walking shared few features with M1 activity during individual leg muscle movements, and was not highly correlated with lower limb trajectories on a single channel basis. These findings suggest that M1 primarily encodes high-level gait motor control (i.e., walking duration and speed) instead of the low-level patterns of leg muscle activation or movement trajectories. Therefore, M1 likely interacts with subcortical/spinal networks, which are responsible for low-level motor control, to produce normal human walking.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 28981644 PMCID: PMC6248549 DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhx155
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cereb Cortex ISSN: 1047-3211 Impact factor: 5.357