Mühlau Mark, Hermsdörfer Joachim, Goldenberg Georg, Wohlschläger Afra M, Castrop Florian, Stahl Robert, Röttinger Michael, Erhard Peter, Haslinger Bernhard, Ceballos-Baumann Andres O, Conrad Bastian, Boecker Henning
Neurologische Klinik Rechts der Isar, Technische Universität München, Munich, Germany.
Neuropsychologia. 2005;43(7):1086-98. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2004.10.004. Epub 2005 Jan 5.
The inability to imitate gestures is an essential feature of apraxia. However, discrepancies exist between clinical studies in apraxic patients and neuroimaging findings on imitation. We therefore aimed to investigate: (1) which areas are recruited during imitation under conditions similar to clinical tests for apraxic deficits; (2) whether there are common lateralized areas subserving imitation irrespective of the acting limb side; and also (3) whether there are differences between hand and finger gestures. We used fMRI in 12 healthy, right handed subjects to investigate the imitation of four types of variable gestures that were presented by video clips (16 different finger and 16 different hand gestures with either the right or the left arm). The respective control conditions consisted of stereotyped gestures (only two gestures presented in pseudorandom order). Subtraction analysis of each type of gesture imitation (variable>stereotyped) revealed a bilateral activation pattern including the inferior parietal cortex Brodmann Area (BA 40), the superior parietal cortex, the inferior frontal cortex (opercular region), the prefrontal motor cortex, the lateral occipito-temporal junction, and the cerebellum. These results were supported by statistical conjunction of all four subtraction analyses and by the common analysis of all four types of gesture imitation. The direct comparison of the right and left hemispheric activation revealed a lateralization to the left only of the inferior parietal cortex. Comparisons between different types of gesture imitation yielded no significant results. In conclusion, gesture imitation recruits bilateral fronto-parietal regions, with significant lateralization of only one area, namely the left inferior parietal cortex. These in vivo data indicate left inferior parietal dominance for gesture imitation in right handers, confirming lesion-based theories of apraxia.
无法模仿手势是失用症的一个基本特征。然而,失用症患者的临床研究结果与模仿的神经影像学发现之间存在差异。因此,我们旨在研究:(1)在类似于失用症缺陷临床测试的条件下,模仿过程中哪些脑区被激活;(2)无论动作肢体的侧别如何,是否存在共同的偏侧化脑区参与模仿;以及(3)手部和手指手势之间是否存在差异。我们对12名健康的右利手受试者进行功能磁共振成像(fMRI),以研究对视频片段呈现的四种类型可变手势的模仿(16种不同的手指手势和16种不同的手部手势,分别用右臂或左臂做出)。相应的对照条件包括刻板手势(仅以伪随机顺序呈现两种手势)。对每种类型的手势模仿(可变>刻板)进行减法分析,结果显示双侧激活模式,包括顶下小叶布罗德曼区(BA 40)、顶上小叶、额下皮质(岛盖区)、前额运动皮质、枕颞外侧交界处和小脑。所有四种减法分析的统计联合以及对所有四种类型手势模仿的共同分析均支持了这些结果。左右半球激活的直接比较显示,仅在顶下小叶存在左侧化。不同类型手势模仿之间的比较未得出显著结果。总之,手势模仿激活双侧额顶区域,仅一个区域存在显著的偏侧化,即左侧顶下小叶。这些活体数据表明右利手个体中手势模仿以左侧顶下小叶为主导,证实了基于病变的失用症理论。