Dai T H, Liu J Z, Sahgal V, Brown R W, Yue G H
Department of Biomedical Engineering/ND20, The Lerner Research Institute, The Cleveland Clinic Foundation, OH 44195, USA.
Exp Brain Res. 2001 Oct;140(3):290-300. doi: 10.1007/s002210100815.
The relationship between functional MRI (fMRI)-measured brain signal and muscle force and or electromyogram (EMG) is critical in interpreting fMRI data and understanding the control mechanisms of voluntary motor actions. We designed a system that could record joint force and surface EMG online with fMRI data. High-quality force and EMG data were obtained while maintaining the quality of the fMRI brain images. Using this system, we determined the relationship between fMRI-measured brain activation and handgrip force and between fMRI-measured brain signal and EMG of extrinsic finger muscles. Ten volunteers participated in the experiments (only seven subjects' data were analyzed due to excessive noise in the fMRI data of three subjects). The participants exerted 20%, 35%, 50%, 65%, and 80% of the maximal force. During each contraction period, handgrip force, surface EMG of the finger flexor and extensor muscles, and fMRI brain images were acquired. The degree of muscle activation (force and EMG) was directly proportional to the amplitude of the brain signal determined by fMRI in the entire brain and in a number of motor function-related cortical fields, including primary motor, sensory regions, supplementary motor area, premotor, prefrontal, parietal and cingulate cortices, and cerebellum. All the examined brain areas demonstrated a similar relationship between the fMRI signal and force. A stronger fMRI signal during higher force indicates that more cortical output neurons and/or interneurons may participate in generating descending commands and/or processing additional sensory information. The similarity in the relationship between muscle output and fMRI signal in the cortical regions suggests that correlated or networked activation among a number of cortical fields may be necessary for controlling precise static force of finger muscles.
功能磁共振成像(fMRI)测量的脑信号与肌肉力量及肌电图(EMG)之间的关系,对于解释fMRI数据和理解自主运动行为的控制机制至关重要。我们设计了一个系统,该系统能够在记录fMRI数据的同时在线记录关节力和表面肌电图。在保持fMRI脑图像质量的同时,获得了高质量的力和肌电图数据。利用该系统,我们确定了fMRI测量的脑激活与握力之间的关系,以及fMRI测量的脑信号与外在手指肌肉肌电图之间的关系。十名志愿者参与了实验(由于三名受试者的fMRI数据噪声过大,仅分析了七名受试者的数据)。参与者分别施加最大力量的20%、35%、50%、65%和80%。在每个收缩期,采集握力、手指屈肌和伸肌的表面肌电图以及fMRI脑图像。肌肉激活程度(力量和肌电图)与fMRI在全脑以及包括初级运动、感觉区域、辅助运动区、运动前区、前额叶、顶叶和扣带回皮质以及小脑在内的一些与运动功能相关的皮质区域所确定的脑信号幅度成正比。所有检查的脑区在fMRI信号与力量之间都表现出相似的关系。在较高力量时更强的fMRI信号表明,可能有更多的皮质输出神经元和/或中间神经元参与生成下行指令和/或处理额外的感觉信息。皮质区域中肌肉输出与fMRI信号之间关系的相似性表明,多个皮质区域之间的相关或网络化激活可能是控制手指肌肉精确静态力量所必需的。