Weilke F, Spiegel S, Boecker H, von Einsiedel H G, Conrad B, Schwaiger M, Erhard P
Department of Neurology, Klinikum Rechts der Isar der Technischen Universität München, 81675 Munich, Germany.
J Neurophysiol. 2001 May;85(5):1858-63. doi: 10.1152/jn.2001.85.5.1858.
The aim of this study was to use time-resolved functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to investigate temporal differences in the activation of the supplementary motor area (SMA) and the primary motor cortex (M1). We report data from eight human volunteers who underwent fMRI examinations in a 1.5T Philips Gyroscan ACS-NT MRI scanner. While wearing a contact glove, subjects executed a complex automated sequence of finger movements either spontaneously or in response to external auditory cues. Based on the result of a functional scout scan, a single slice that included the M1 and the SMA was selected for image acquisition (echo planar imaging, repetition time 100 ms, echo time 50 ms, 64 x 64 matrix, 1,000 images). Data were analyzed with a shifting cross-correlation approach using the STIMULATE program and in-house programs written in Interactive Data Language (IDL(TM)). Time-course data were generated for regions of interest in the M1 as well as in the rostral and caudal SMA. Mean time between onset of the finger movement sequence and half-maximum of the signal change in M1 was 3.6 s for the externally cued execution (SD 0.5) and 3.5 s for the spontaneous execution (SD 0.6). Activation in the rostral section of the SMA occurred 0.7 s earlier than it did in the M1 during the externally cued execution and 2.0 s earlier during the spontaneous execution, a difference significant at the P < 0.01 level. Our results indicate that rostral SMA activation precedes M1 activation by varying time intervals in the sub-second range that are determined by the mode of movement initialization. By applying a paradigm that exerts a differential influence on temporal activation, we could ensure that the observed timing differences were not the result of differences in hemodynamic response function.
本研究的目的是使用时间分辨功能磁共振成像(fMRI)来研究辅助运动区(SMA)和初级运动皮层(M1)激活的时间差异。我们报告了八名人类志愿者的数据,他们在1.5T飞利浦Gyroscan ACS-NT MRI扫描仪中接受了fMRI检查。在佩戴接触手套时,受试者自发地或响应外部听觉提示执行复杂的手指自动运动序列。基于功能预扫描的结果,选择包含M1和SMA的单个切片进行图像采集(回波平面成像,重复时间100毫秒,回波时间50毫秒,64×64矩阵,1000张图像)。使用STIMULATE程序和用交互式数据语言(IDL(TM))编写的内部程序,采用移动互相关方法分析数据。生成了M1以及SMA头端和尾端感兴趣区域的时间进程数据。在外部提示执行时,手指运动序列开始到M1信号变化达到半最大值之间的平均时间为3.6秒(标准差0.5),自发执行时为3.5秒(标准差0.6)。在外部提示执行期间,SMA头端部分的激活比M1早0.7秒,自发执行时早2.0秒,在P<0.01水平上差异显著。我们的结果表明,SMA头端激活在亚秒范围内以不同的时间间隔先于M1激活,这些时间间隔由运动初始化模式决定。通过应用对时间激活有不同影响的范式,我们可以确保观察到的时间差异不是血流动力学反应函数差异的结果。