Heilpflanzen-Welt - Die Welt der Heilpflanzen!
Heilpflanzen-Welt - Natürlich natürlich!
May 2024

Relationships between movement initiation times and movement-related cortical potentials in Parkinson's disease

Author(s): Iansek, R., Bradshaw, J. L.

Journal/Book: Hum Movement Sci. 1999; 18: PO Box 211, 1000 AE Amsterdam, Netherlands. Elsevier Science Bv. 443-459.

Abstract: Movement-related cortical potentials recorded from the scalp reveal increasing cortical activity occurring prior to voluntary movement. Studies of set-related cortical activity recorded from single neurones within premotor and supplementary motor areas in monkeys suggest that such premovement activity may act to prime activity of appropriate motor units in readiness to move, thereby facilitating the movement response. Such a role of early stage premovement activity in movement-related cortical potentials was investigated by examining the relationship between premovement cortical activity and movement initiation or reaction times. Parkinson's disease and control subjects performed a simple button-pressing reaction time task and individual movement-related potentials were averaged for responses with short compared with long reaction times. For Parkinson's disease subjects but not for the control subjects, early stage premovement cortical activity was significantly increased in amplitude for faster reaction times, indicating that there is indeed a relationship between premovement cortical activity amplitude and movement initiation or reaction times. In support of studies of set-related cortical activity in monkeys, it is therefore suggested that early stage premovement activity reflects the priming of appropriate motor units of primary motor cortex, thereby reducing movement initiation or reaction times.

Note: Article Cunnington R, Monash Univ, Dept Psychol, Neuropsychol Res Unit, Clayton, Vic 3168, AUSTRALIA

Keyword(s): Parkinson's disease; movement-related potentials; movement initiation; reaction time; SUPPLEMENTARY MOTOR AREA; POSITRON EMISSION TOMOGRAPHY; NEURONAL-ACTIVITY; PREMOTOR CORTEX; SEQUENTIAL MOVEMENTS; VOLUNTARY MOVEMENT; INTENDED MOVEMENT; MONKEY; DIRECTION; FORCE


Search only the database: 

 

Zurück | Weiter

© Top Fit Gesund, 1992-2024. Alle Rechte vorbehalten – ImpressumDatenschutzerklärung