Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3048211 Clinical Neurophysiology 2007 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveAmputation of a limb induces plastic changes in motor cortex that modify the relationships between the missing limb and the remaining body part representations. We used motor imagery to explore the interactions between a missing lower limb and the hand/forearm cortical representations.MethodsEight right leg amputees and nine healthy subjects participated in the study. Focal transcranial magnetic stimulation was used to map out the hand/forearm muscle maps at rest and during imagined ankle dorsiflexion and plantarflexion.ResultsIn healthy subjects, both motor imagery tasks strongly inhibited the map volume and contracted the map area of the hand muscles. By contrast, in amputees, imagined dorsiflexion and plantarflexion enhanced the map area and volume of the hand muscles. In the forearm muscle maps, both groups displayed a similar pattern of isodirectional coupling during both motor imagery tasks. Imagined dorsiflexion facilitated MEP amplitudes of the extensor and inhibited the flexor muscles of the upper limb. This pattern was reversed during imagined plantarflexion.ConclusionsWe argue that there exists an inhibitory relationship between the foot and hand motor cortices that ceases to exist after leg amputation.SignificanceThe understanding of these functional mechanisms may shed light on the motor network underlying interlimb coordination.

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