首页> 外文期刊>The Journal of Physiology >Cerebellar repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation restores pharyngeal brain activity and swallowing behaviour after disruption by a cortical virtual lesion
【24h】

Cerebellar repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation restores pharyngeal brain activity and swallowing behaviour after disruption by a cortical virtual lesion

机译:小脑重复的经颅磁刺激在皮质虚拟病变中断后恢复咽部脑活动和吞咽行为

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

Key points Despite evidence that the human cerebellum has an important role in swallowing neurophysiology, the effects of cerebellar stimulation on swallowing in the disrupted brain have not been explored. In this study, for the first time, the application of cerebellar neurostimulation is characterized in a human model of disrupted swallowing (using a cortical virtual lesion). It is demonstrated that cerebellar stimulation can reverse the suppressed activity in the cortical swallowing system and restore swallowing function in a challenging behavioural task, suggesting the findings may have important therapeutic implications. Abstract Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) can alter neuronal activity within the brain with therapeutic potential. Low frequency stimulation to the ‘dominant’ cortical swallowing projection induces a ‘virtual‐lesion’ transiently suppressing cortical excitability and disrupting swallowing behaviour. Here, we compared the ability of ipsi‐lesional, contra‐lesional and sham cerebellar rTMS to reverse the effects of a ‘virtual‐lesion’ in health. Two groups of healthy participants ( n ?=?15/group) were intubated with pharyngeal catheters. Baseline pharyngeal motor evoked potentials (PMEPs) and swallowing performance (reaction task) were measured. Participants received 10?min of 1?Hz rTMS to the pharyngeal motor cortex which elicited the largest PMEPs to suppress cortical activity and disrupt swallowing behaviour. Over six visits, participants were randomized to receive 250 pulses of 10?Hz cerebellar rTMS to the ipsi‐lesional side, contra‐lesional side or sham while assessing PMEP amplitude or swallowing performance for an hour afterwards. Compared to sham, active cerebellar rTMS, whether administered ipsi‐lesionally ( P ?=?0.011) or contra‐lesionally ( P ?=?0.005), reversed the inhibitory effects of the cortical ‘virtual‐lesion’ on PMEPs and swallowing accuracy (ipsi‐lesional, P ??0.001, contra‐lesional, P ??0.001). Cerebellar rTMS was able to reverse the disruptive effects of a ‘virtual lesion’. These findings provide evidence for developing cerebellar rTMS into a treatment for post‐stroke dysphagia.
机译:关键点尽管有证据表明人体细胞在吞咽神经生理中具有重要作用,但小脑刺激对破坏性大脑吞咽的影响尚未探讨。在本研究中,首次施用小脑神经刺激的特征在于破坏吞咽的人模型(使用皮质虚拟病变)。结果证明,小脑刺激可以在皮质吞咽系统中逆转抑制活性,并在挑战性行为任务中恢复吞咽功能,表明该发现可能具有重要的治疗意义。摘要重复性经颅磁刺激(RTMS)可以改变大脑内的神经元活动,治疗潜力。对“主导”皮质吞咽投影的低频刺激会引起“虚拟病变”瞬间抑制皮质兴奋性并破坏吞咽行为。在这里,我们比较了IPSI-Lesional,Contra-Lesional和Shamebellar RTMS在健康中“虚拟病变”的影响的能力。用咽导管插管两组健康参与者(N?= 15 /组)。测量基线咽部电机诱发电位(PMEPS)和吞咽性能(反应任务)。参与者收到10?最小的1?Hz RTMS到咽部电机皮层,引发了最大的PMEPs以抑制皮质活动并破坏吞咽行为。在六次访问中,参与者随机地接受250个10?Hz小脑RTMS到IPSi-Lesional侧,对抗损伤侧或假的,同时在后续评估PMEP幅度或吞咽性能。与假,活性小脑RTMS相比,无论是否患有IPSI-LESIOLALLY(P?= 0.011)或对比(P?= 0.005),逆转了皮质“虚拟病变”对PMEPS和吞咽精度的抑制作用( IPSI损伤,P?α.<0.001,对比损伤,p≤≤0.001)。小脑RTMS能够反转“虚拟病变”的破坏性影响。这些发现提供了将小脑RTMS发育为卒中后障碍治疗的证据。

著录项

  • 来源
    《The Journal of Physiology》 |2019年第9期|共14页
  • 作者单位

    Gastrointestinal (GI) SciencesSalford Royal Hospital (part of the Manchester Academic Health;

    Gastrointestinal (GI) SciencesSalford Royal Hospital (part of the Manchester Academic Health;

    Gastrointestinal (GI) SciencesSalford Royal Hospital (part of the Manchester Academic Health;

    Gastrointestinal (GI) SciencesSalford Royal Hospital (part of the Manchester Academic Health;

    Gastrointestinal (GI) SciencesSalford Royal Hospital (part of the Manchester Academic Health;

    Division of Dysphagia RehabilitationNiigata University Graduate School of Medical and Dental;

    Stroke Division of Clinical NeuroscienceUniversity of NottinghamNottingham UK;

    Sobell Department of Motor Neuroscience and Movement DisordersUniversity College LondonLondon UK;

    Division of Dysphagia RehabilitationNiigata University Graduate School of Medical and Dental;

    Gastrointestinal (GI) SciencesSalford Royal Hospital (part of the Manchester Academic Health;

  • 收录信息
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 人体生理学;
  • 关键词

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号