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202 results on '"motor evoked potential (MEP)"'

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51. Corticospinal Excitability of the Lower Limb Muscles During the Anticipatory Postural Adjustments: A TMS Study During Dart Throwing

52. Early onset scoliosis with intraspinal anomalies: management with growing rod.

53. Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation: A Call for Better Data.

55. Resetting tremor by single and paired transcranial magnetic stimulation in Parkinson’s disease and essential tremor.

56. Pulsed Facilitation of Corticospinal Excitability by the Sensorimotor μ-Alpha Rhythm

57. Motor Empathy is a Consequence of Misattribution of Sensory Information in Observers

58. Neuromuscular electrical stimulation of the median nerve facilitates low motor cortex excitability in patients with spinocerebellar ataxia.

59. Changes in beta and high-gamma power in resting-state electrocorticogram induced by repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation of primary motor cortex in unanesthetized macaque monkeys

61. Unilateral imagined movement increases interhemispheric inhibition from the contralateral to ipsilateral motor cortex.

62. Vision and proprioception do not influence the excitability of the corticomotoneuronal pathway during upright standing in young and elderly adults.

63. Practice Trends in the Utilization of Intraoperative Neurophysiological Monitoring in Pediatric Neurosurgery as a Function of Complication Rate, and Patient-, Surgeon-, and Procedure-Related Factors.

64. Simultaneous Cervical and Lumbar Spinal Cord Stimulation Induces Facilitation of Both Spinal and Corticospinal Circuitry in Humans

65. NIRS in clinical neurology — a ‘promising’ tool?

66. The Incidence of Unacceptable Movement with Motor Evoked Potentials During Craniotomy for Aneurysm Clipping.

67. A new neurophysiological approach to assess central motor conduction damage to proximal and distal muscles of lower limbs.

68. Does interhemispheric communication relate to the bilateral function of muscles? A study of scapulothoracic muscles using transcranial magnetic stimulation.

69. Relationship between excitability, plasticity and thickness of the motor cortex in older adults.

70. Postural control and central motor pathway involvement in type 2 diabetes mellitus: Dynamic posturographic and electrophysiologic studies.

72. Sensorimotor mu-alpha power is positively related to corticospinal excitability

73. Electrophysiological characterisation of motor and sensory tracts in patients with hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP).

74. Cortical excitability in drug naive juvenile myoclonic epilepsy.

75. Corticomotor excitability induced by anodal transcranial direct current stimulation with and without non-exhaustive movement.

76. Potentiation of quantitative electroencephalograms following prefrontal repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation in patients with major depression.

77. Different motor learning effects on excitability changes of motor cortex in muscle contraction state.

78. Facilitation of corticospinal tract excitability by transcranial direct current stimulation combined with voluntary grip exercise.

79. Effect of repetitive afferent electrical stimulation of the lower limb on corticomotor excitability and implications for rehabilitation.

80. Accounting for Stimulations That Do Not Elicit Motor-Evoked Potentials When Mapping Cortical Representations of Multiple Muscles.

81. Preventing Lower Cranial Nerve Injuries during Fourth Ventricle Tumor Resection by Utilizing Intraoperative Neurophysiological Monitoring.

82. Increased primary motor cortical excitability by a single-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation over the supplementary motor area.

83. The truth-telling motor cortex: Response competition in M1 discloses deceptive behaviour

84. Examining cortical dynamics and connectivity with simultaneous single-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation and fast optical imaging

85. Enhancing the effect of repetitive I-wave pairedpulse TMS (iTMS) by adjusting for the individual I-wave periodicity.

86. Effects of Anesthetic Regimens and Other Confounding Factors Affecting the Interpretation of Motor Evoked Potentials During Pediatric Spine Surgery.

87. The safety of transcranial magnetic stimulation with deep brain stimulation instruments

88. Temporal Facilitation Prior to Voluntary Muscle Relaxation.

89. Further evidence for excitability changes in human primary motor cortex during ipsilateral voluntary contractions

90. Differences in after-effect between monophasic and biphasic high-frequency rTMS of the human motor cortex

91. Effects of intermanual transfer induced by repetitive precision grip on input–output properties of untrained contralateral limb muscles.

92. Motor cortex excitability during unilateral muscle activity

93. Long-term Potentiation in the Motor Cortex Evoked by Paired Associative Stimulation.

94. Excitability changes in human hand motor area induced by voluntary teeth clenching are dependent on muscle properties.

95. Functional demanded excitability changes of human hand motor area.

96. Physical practice induces excitability changes in human hand motor area during motor imagery.

97. Long-lasting effects of paired associative stimulation in hemiparetic stroke patients

98. Modulation of interhemispheric inhibition during passive movement of the upper limb reflects changes in motor cortical excitability.

99. Motor rehabilitation and brain plasticity after hemiparetic stroke

100. Stability of corticospinal excitability and grip force in intrinsic hand muscles in man over a 24-h period

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