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The human hand motor area is transiently suppressed by an unexpected auditory stimulus

Authors :
Yoshikazu Ugawa
Toshiaki Furubayashi
Yasuo Terao
Yasushi Shiio
Ritsuko Hanajima
Ichiro Kanazawa
Hitoshi Mochizuki
Haruo Uesugi
Hiroyuki Enomoto
Katsuyuki Sakai
Katsuyuki Machii
Source :
Clinical Neurophysiology. 111:178-183
Publication Year :
2000
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2000.

Abstract

Objective : To study the effect of a loud auditory stimulus on the excitability of the human motor cortex. Methods : Ten normal volunteers participated in this study. The size of responses to transcranial magnetic or electrical cortical stimulation (TMS or TES) given at different times (ISIs) after a loud sound were compared with those to TMS or TES alone (control response). Different intensities and durations of sound were used at several intertrial intervals (ITIs). In addition, we examined how the presence of a preceding click modulated the effect of a loud sound (prepulse inhibition). The incidence of startle response evoked by various stimuli was also studied. Results : A loud auditory stimulus suppressed EMG responses to TMS when it preceded the magnetic stimulus by 30–60 ms, whereas it did not affect responses to TES. This suggests that the suppression occurred at a cortical level. Significant suppression was evoked only when the sound was louder than 80 dB and longer than 50 ms in duration. Such stimuli frequently elicited a startle response when given alone. The effect was not evoked if the ITI was 5 s, but was evoked when it was longer than 20 s. A preceding click reduced the suppression elicited by loud sounds. Conclusions : Auditory stimuli that produced the greatest effect on responses to TMS had the same characteristics as those which yielded the most consistent auditory startle. We suggest that modulation of cortical excitability occurs in parallel with the auditory startle and both may arise from the same region of the brain-stem.

Details

ISSN :
13882457
Volume :
111
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Neurophysiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cead028d83864511e04c05a7dc14f22b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s1388-2457(99)00200-x