J Korean Acad Rehabil Med.  2011 Apr;35(2):180-187.

Effect of Premotor Cortex Stimulation on Motor Learning in Basal Ganglial Hemorrhage Patients

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Hallym University College of Medicine, Anyang 431-070, Korea. wooky@hallym.ac.kr

Abstract


OBJECTIVE
To investigate the effects of high frequency (10 Hz) repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) on visuospatial motor learning, stimulated on the premotor cortex in basal ganglia hemorrhage patients. METHOD: Nine patients were randomized to receive real and sham rTMS. We subdivided into two groups according to the integrity of the corticospinal tract measured by diffusion tensor tractography. The implicit visuospatial learning paradigm composed of numbers 1 to 4, in which 12 sequential numbers (2-3-1-4-3-2-4-1-3-4-2-1) were incorporated randomly. We obtained the mean fraction anisotrophy (FA) and apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values from the corticospinal tract and subdividing into two groups by calculating the relative value (laterality %).
RESULTS
rTMS on the premotor cortex was effective only in simple motor learning but not in visuospatial learning in group analysis. The primary motor cortex excitability after the premotor cortex stimulation has been changed significantly. Subdividing into two groups according to the integrity of the corticospinal tract using the ADC value, the low ADC value group showed significant reduction of the visuospatial response time.
CONCLUSION
High frequency rTMS on the premotor cortex was effective in simple motor learning and also in the group who maintained more integrity of the corticospinal tract in basal ganglia hemorrhage.

Keyword

Premotor cortex; Motor learning; RTMS; Tractography; Stroke

MeSH Terms

Basal Ganglia Hemorrhage
Diffusion
Hemorrhage
Humans
Learning
Motor Cortex
Pyramidal Tracts
Salicylamides
Stroke
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation
Salicylamides
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