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Practice changes beta power at rest and its modulation during movement in healthy subjects but not in patients with Parkinson's disease
- Source :
- Brain and Behavior
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- Wiley, 2015.
-
Abstract
- Background PD (Parkinson's disease) is characterized by impairments in cortical plasticity, in beta frequency at rest and in beta power modulation during movement (i.e., event-related ERS [synchronization] and ERD [desynchronization]). Recent results with experimental protocols inducing long-term potentiation in healthy subjects suggest that cortical plasticity phenomena might be reflected by changes of beta power recorded with EEG during rest. Here, we determined whether motor practice produces changes in beta power at rest and during movements in both healthy subjects and patients with PD. We hypothesized that such changes would be reduced in PD. Methods We thus recorded EEG in patients with PD and age-matched controls before, during and after a 40-minute reaching task. We determined posttask changes of beta power at rest and assessed the progressive changes of beta ERD and ERS during the task over frontal and sensorimotor regions. Results We found that beta ERS and ERD changed significantly with practice in controls but not in PD. In PD compared to controls, beta power at rest was greater over frontal sensors but posttask changes, like those during movements, were far less evident. In both groups, kinematic characteristics improved with practice; however, there was no correlation between such improvements and the changes in beta power. Conclusions We conclude that prolonged practice in a motor task produces use-dependent modifications that are reflected in changes of beta power at rest and during movement. In PD, such changes are significantly reduced; such a reduction might represent, at least partially, impairment of cortical plasticity.
- Subjects :
- Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Parkinson's disease
Event‐related desynchronization, RRID:nif‐0000‐00076, RRID:nlx_143928
RRID:nlx_155825, RRID:rid_000042, event‐related synchronization, kinematics, motor task, plasticity, Aged, Case-Control Studies, Electroencephalography Phase Synchronization, Evoked Potentials, Female, Humans, Long-Term Potentiation, Male, Middle Aged, Motor Cortex, Movement, Neuronal Plasticity, Parkinson Disease, Practice (Psychology), Psychomotor Performance, Rest
Movement
Rest
Electroencephalography Phase Synchronization
Long-Term Potentiation
Audiology
Electroencephalography
Behavioral Neuroscience
event‐related synchronization
motor task
Neuroplasticity
RRID:nlx_143928
medicine
RRID:nif‐0000‐00076
Humans
Beta (finance)
skin and connective tissue diseases
Evoked Potentials
Rest (music)
Original Research
Aged
Neuronal Plasticity
medicine.diagnostic_test
Motor Cortex
Long-term potentiation
RRID:rid_000042
Parkinson Disease
Middle Aged
medicine.disease
RRID:nlx_155825
medicine.anatomical_structure
Practice, Psychological
kinematics
plasticity
Case-Control Studies
Practice (Psychology)
Event‐related desynchronization
Female
sense organs
Psychology
Neuroscience
Psychomotor Performance
Motor cortex
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Brain and Behavior
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....199c5bcc763a051c5843c4d14fcba7bf