| Literature DB >> 32047617 |
Antonella Conte1,2, Giovanni Defazio3, Marcello Mascia3, Daniele Belvisi2, Patrizia Pantano1,2, Alfredo Berardelli1,2.
Abstract
Focal dystonia is a movement disorder characterized by involuntary muscle contractions that determine abnormal postures. The traditional hypothesis that the pathophysiology of focal dystonia entails a single structural dysfunction (i.e. basal ganglia) has recently come under scrutiny. The proposed network disorder model implies that focal dystonias arise from aberrant communication between various brain areas. Based on findings from animal studies, the role of the cerebellum has attracted increased interest in the last few years. Moreover, it has been increasingly reported that focal dystonias also include nonmotor disturbances, including sensory processing abnormalities, which have begun to attract attention. Current evidence from neurophysiological and neuroimaging investigations suggests that cerebellar involvement in the network and mechanisms underlying sensory abnormalities may have a role in determining the clinical heterogeneity of focal dystonias. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: dystonia; magnetic resonance; pathophysiology; neuroimaging; neurophysiology
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32047617 PMCID: PMC6993830 DOI: 10.12688/f1000research.21029.2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: F1000Res ISSN: 2046-1402
Recent neurophysiological abnormalities in focal dystonias.
| Neural
| Function | Patients | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cerebellum | Eye blink
| CD with and without
| Altered only in patients with tremor |
| Feedforward adaptation | CD with and without
| Altered only in patients with tremor | |
| Sensory system | Somatosensory
| CD | Increased values correlate with high-frequency
|
| Quantitative sensory
| CD, upper limb dystonia,
| Reduced cold and hot detection threshold | |
| Laser evoked potentials | CD, BSP | Normal N2/P2 amplitude | |
| Conditioned pain
| CD, BSP | Reduced conditioned pain modulation response as
|
BSP, blepharospasm; CD, cervical dystonia
Recent neuroimaging abnormalities in focal dystonias.
| MRI technique | Function/analysis | Patients | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Task-related fMRI | Head rotation | CD | Increased activation of the ipsilateral anterior cerebellum
|
| Hand force task | CD | Increased activity of the cerebellum and decreased
| |
| Visuospatial task | CD | Reduced activation of the cerebellum associated with a
| |
| Transient finger pressure | WC | Decreased activation of the sensorimotor network | |
| Visual looming stimuli | CD | Reduced superior collicular activation | |
| Resting state fMRI | Independent component analysis | BSP | Abnormalities in sensory–motor network, frontoparietal
|
| Intraregional brain activities
| BSP | Abnormalities in both intraregional and interregional
| |
| Graph theoretical analysis | BSP, CD,
| Large-scale alteration of network architecture | |
| Diffusion tensor MRI | FA, MD | BSP, CD, LD | Structural alterations distinguish between focal dystonia
|
BSP, blepharospasm; CD, cervical dystonia; FA, fractional anisotropy; fMRI, functional magnetic resonance imaging; LD, laryngeal dystonia; MD, mean diffusivity; WC, writer’s cramp.