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Cerebellar Brain Inhibition Is Associated With the Severity of Cervical Dystonia

Authors :
Yamile Jasaui
Tamara Pringsheim
Nicholas D. J. Strzalkowski
Zelma H. T. Kiss
Laura Avanzino
Davide Martino
Rachel E. Sondergaard
Liu Shi Gan
Justyna R. Sarna
Sarah Furtado
Source :
Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology. 40:293-300
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2021.

Abstract

Purpose Cerebellar connectivity is thought to be abnormal in cervical dystonia (CD) and other dystonia subtypes, based on evidence from imaging studies and animal work. The authors investigated whether transcranial magnetic stimulation-induced cerebellar brain inhibition (CBI), a measure of cerebellar efficiency at inhibiting motor outflow, is abnormal in patients with CD and/or is associated with clinical features of CD. Because of methodological heterogeneity in CBI reporting, the authors deployed additional controls to reduce potential sources of variability in this study. Methods Cerebellar brain inhibition was applied in 20 CD patients and 14 healthy control subjects. Cerebellar brain inhibition consisted of a cerebellar conditioning stimulus delivered at four different interstimulus intervals (ISIs) before a test stimulus delivered to hand muscle representation in the motor cortex. The average ratio of conditioned to unconditioned motor evoked potential was computed for each ISI. Cervical dystonia clinical severity was measured using the Toronto Western Spasmodic Torticollis Rating Scale. Control experiments involved neuronavigated transcranial magnetic stimulation, neck postural control in patients, and careful screening for noncerebellar pathway inhibition via cervicomedullary evoked potentials. Results There was no difference between CBI measured in healthy control subjects and CD patients at any of the four ISIs; however, CBI efficiency was significantly correlated with worsening CD clinical severity at the 5 ms ISI. Conclusions Cerebellar brain inhibition is a variable measure in both healthy control subjects and CD patients; much of this variability may be attributed to experimental methodology. Yet, CD severity is significantly associated with reduced CBI at the 5 ms ISI, suggestive of cerebello-thalamo-cortical tract dysfunction in this disorder.

Details

ISSN :
07360258
Volume :
40
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....134c767e75637d5ac43d0b29a54f3eac
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/wnp.0000000000000884