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Abnormal motor cortex excitability during linguistic tasks in adductor-type spasmodic dysphonia.

Authors :
Suppa, A.
Marsili, L.
Giovannelli, F.
Di Stasio, F.
Rocchi, L.
Upadhyay, N.
Ruoppolo, G.
Cincotta, M.
Berardelli, A.
Source :
European Journal of Neuroscience; Aug2015, Vol. 42 Issue 4, p2051-2060, 10p, 3 Color Photographs, 3 Black and White Photographs, 1 Diagram, 2 Charts
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

In healthy subjects ( HS), transcranial magnetic stimulation ( TMS) applied during 'linguistic' tasks discloses excitability changes in the dominant hemisphere primary motor cortex (M1). We investigated 'linguistic' task-related cortical excitability modulation in patients with adductor-type spasmodic dysphonia ( ASD), a speech-related focal dystonia. We studied 10 ASD patients and 10 HS. Speech examination included voice cepstral analysis. We investigated the dominant/non-dominant M1 excitability at baseline, during 'linguistic' (reading aloud/silent reading/producing simple phonation) and 'non-linguistic' tasks (looking at non-letter strings/producing oral movements). Motor evoked potentials ( MEPs) were recorded from the contralateral hand muscles. We measured the cortical silent period ( CSP) length and tested MEPs in HS and patients performing the 'linguistic' tasks with different voice intensities. We also examined MEPs in HS and ASD during hand-related 'action-verb' observation. Patients were studied under and not-under botulinum neurotoxin-type A (Bo NT-A). In HS, TMS over the dominant M1 elicited larger MEPs during 'reading aloud' than during the other 'linguistic'/'non-linguistic' tasks. Conversely, in ASD, TMS over the dominant M1 elicited increased-amplitude MEPs during 'reading aloud' and 'syllabic phonation' tasks. CSP length was shorter in ASD than in HS and remained unchanged in both groups performing 'linguistic'/'non-linguistic' tasks. In HS and ASD, 'linguistic' task-related excitability changes were present regardless of the different voice intensities. During hand-related 'action-verb' observation, MEPs decreased in HS, whereas in ASD they increased. In ASD, Bo NT-A improved speech, as demonstrated by cepstral analysis and restored the TMS abnormalities. ASD reflects dominant hemisphere excitability changes related to 'linguistic' tasks; Bo NT-A returns these excitability changes to normal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0953816X
Volume :
42
Issue :
4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
European Journal of Neuroscience
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
108929754
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/ejn.12977