| Literature DB >> 31738940 |
Shancheng Bao1, Alexander M Morgan1, Yuming Lei2, Jinsung Wang3.
Abstract
Congenital mirror movements (CMMs) have been traditionally thought to occur due to the corticospinal tracts that project abnormally to both sides of the body. More recently, it has been suggested that both brain hemispheres are activated during intended unilateral movements due to deficient transcallosal inhibition, leading to mirror movements on the unintended side as well. To further understand the mechanisms underlying CMMs, we examined the pattern of interlimb transfer following visuomotor adaptation in 'DB', an individual with CMMs. DB's CMMs were confirmed by detecting EMG signals in both arms during intended unilateral movements, and also when transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) was applied to the motor cortex. Following that, DB performed reaching movements with the left arm under a visuomotor condition in which the visual display was rotated 30° counterclockwise about the start circle, and then with the right arm under the same (experiment 1) or opposing (experiment 2) rotation condition. DB's performances were compared with the data from control subjects. In both experiments, DB was able to adapt to the rotation with either arm; however, movement errors at the beginning of right-arm adaptation did not differ from those at the beginning of left-arm adaptation, indicating no transfer. These transfer patterns differ from those observed in controls, who demonstrated substantial transfer when the rotation directions were the same between the arms, but no transfer when they were opposite. These findings suggest that in DB, both hemispheres are activated during unilateral movements, but interhemispheric communication is impaired, thus resulting in mirror movements on the involuntary side.Entities:
Keywords: Bilateral synkinesis; Generalization; Motor learning; Transcranial magnetic stimulation
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31738940 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2019.107265
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychologia ISSN: 0028-3932 Impact factor: 3.139