Van Der Werf Ysbrand D, Paus Tomás
Cognitive Neuroscience Unit, Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University, 3801 Rue University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Exp Brain Res. 2006 Nov;175(2):231-45. doi: 10.1007/s00221-006-0551-2. Epub 2006 Jun 17.
We investigated the properties of the neural response to transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) applied over the human primary motor cortex. Consistent with our previous findings, single pulses of TMS induce a characteristic negative deflection at 45 ms (N45) and a transient oscillation in the beta frequency-range (15-30 Hz), as measured using electroencephalograpy (EEG). Here we show the relative specificity of the beta oscillation and the N45; both are stronger when elicited by stimulation applied over the primary motor cortex, as compared with stimulation over the dorsal premotor cortex. We also provide a quantitative analysis of the beta responses to single pulses of TMS and show that the responses are highly phaselocked to the TMS pulses within single subjects; this phaselocking is similar from subject to subject. A single pulse of TMS applied over the primary motor cortex thus appears to reset the ongoing oscillations of the neurons, bringing them transiently into synchrony. Finally, we examine the effect of local or distal modulation of the excitability of the primary motor cortex on the beta oscillation and the N45 in response to single-pulse TMS. We applied low-frequency subthreshold repetitive TMS either over the primary motor cortex (local modulation) or, on a separate day, over the dorsal premotor cortex (distal modulation). The modulation was evaluated with single suprathreshold test pulses of TMS applied over the primary motor cortex before and after the subthreshold low-frequency rTMS. We recorded the EEG response throughout the testing session, i.e. to both the subthreshold and the suprathreshold pulses. After repetitive TMS applied over the primary motor cortex, but not the dorsal premotor cortex, the amplitude of the N45 in response to suprathreshold pulses tended to decrease (not significant), and subsequently increased (significant); neither type of repetitive TMS affected the amplitude of the beta oscillation. We conclude that (1) the N45 depends on circuits intrinsic to the primary motor cortex; (2) the beta oscillation is specific to stimulation of the primary motor cortex, but is not affected by modulation of either cortical area and; (3) the beta oscillatory response to pulses of TMS arises from resetting of ongoing oscillations rather than their induction.
我们研究了经颅磁刺激(TMS)作用于人类初级运动皮层时神经反应的特性。与我们之前的研究结果一致,经脑电图(EEG)测量,单次TMS脉冲会在45毫秒时诱发一个特征性的负向偏转(N45)以及β频率范围(15 - 30赫兹)内的短暂振荡。在此我们展示了β振荡和N45的相对特异性;与刺激背侧运动前区皮层相比,当刺激施加于初级运动皮层时,二者都更强。我们还对单次TMS脉冲引发的β反应进行了定量分析,并表明在单个受试者中,这些反应与TMS脉冲高度锁相;不同受试者之间这种锁相情况相似。因此,施加于初级运动皮层的单次TMS脉冲似乎会重置神经元正在进行的振荡,使它们暂时同步。最后,我们研究了初级运动皮层兴奋性的局部或远端调制对单次脉冲TMS引发的β振荡和N45的影响。我们在初级运动皮层(局部调制)或在另一天在背侧运动前区皮层(远端调制)施加低频阈下重复TMS。在阈下低频重复TMS前后,通过在初级运动皮层施加单次阈上测试脉冲来评估调制情况。我们在整个测试过程中记录EEG反应,即对阈下和阈上脉冲的反应。在初级运动皮层而非背侧运动前区皮层施加重复TMS后,对阈上脉冲反应的N45幅度先趋于下降(不显著),随后上升(显著);两种类型的重复TMS均未影响β振荡的幅度。我们得出结论:(1)N45依赖于初级运动皮层固有的神经回路;(2)β振荡对初级运动皮层的刺激具有特异性,但不受任何一个皮层区域调制的影响;(3)对TMS脉冲的β振荡反应源于正在进行的振荡的重置而非诱导。