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Corticospinal suppression underlying intact movement preparation fades in late Parkinson’s disease

Authors :
UCL - SSS/IONS/COSY - Systems & cognitive Neuroscience
Wilhelm, Emmanuelle
Quoilin, Caroline
Derosiere, Gerard
Paço, Susana
Jeanjean, anne
Duque, Julie
UCL - SSS/IONS/COSY - Systems & cognitive Neuroscience
Wilhelm, Emmanuelle
Quoilin, Caroline
Derosiere, Gerard
Paço, Susana
Jeanjean, anne
Duque, Julie
Source :
MedRxiv, (2022)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

In Parkinson’s disease, neurophysiological abnormalities within the primary motor cortex have been shown to contribute to cardinal symptoms such as bradykinesia, but the exact modalities are still uncertain. Here, we propose that such impairment could involve alterations of mechanisms shaping motor activity specifically during voluntary movement preparation. Indeed, several past studies in healthy populations have suggested that a strong suppression of corticospinal excitability called “preparatory suppression” – propels movement execution by increasing motor neural gain. Thus, we hypothesized that a gradual alteration to this mechanism may contribute to progressive motor slowness in Parkinson’s disease. We also predicted a benefit of dopamine medication in restoring correct motor neural activity during action preparation. To test these hypotheses, we investigated preparatory suppression on two consecutive days in 29 Parkinson’s disease patients (ON and OFF medication) and 29 matched healthy controls. Single-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation was applied over both primary motor cortices, eliciting concurrent motor-evoked potentials in the two hands, while subjects were either at rest or prepared a left- or right-hand response in an instructed-delay choice reaction time task. Preparatory suppression was assessed by expressing the amplitude of motor potentials evoked during movement preparation relative to those obtained at rest. These neurophysiological measures were cross-analysed with task behaviour and clinical data. Contrary to healthy controls, Parkinson’s disease patients showed a lack of preparatory suppression, which appeared to depend on disease progression, but not on dopamine medication. Indeed, in relatively early disease stages, patients still exhibited partial preparatory suppression, while in later stages, they lacked it completely and even exhibited a tendency for corticospinal facilitation in the hand selected for movement execution. As expected

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
MedRxiv, (2022)
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1328225064
Document Type :
Electronic Resource