Kida Tetsuo, Wasaka Toshiaki, Inui Koji, Akatsuka Kosuke, Nakata Hiroki, Kakigi Ryusuke
Department of Integrative Physiology, National Institute for Physiological Sciences, Myodaiji, Okazaki 444-8585, Japan.
Neuroimage. 2006 Sep;32(3):1355-64. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2006.05.015. Epub 2006 Jun 27.
Many studies have reported a movement-related modulation of response in the primary and secondary somatosensory cortices (SI and SII) to a task-irrelevant stimulation in primates. In the present study, magnetoencephalography (MEG) was used to examine the top-down centrifugal regulation of neural responses in the human SI and SII to a task-relevant somatosensory signal triggering a voluntary movement. Nine healthy adults participated in the study. A visual warning signal was followed 2 s later by a somatosensory imperative signal delivered to the right median nerve at the wrist. Three kinds of warning signal informed the participants of the reaction which should be executed on presentation of the imperative signal (rest or extension of the right index finger, extension of the left index finger). The somatosensory stimulation was used to both generate neural responses and trigger voluntary movement and therefore was regarded as a task-relevant signal. The responses were recorded using a whole-head MEG system. The P35m response around the SI was reduced in magnitude without alteration of the primary SI response, N20m, when the signal triggered a voluntary movement compared to the control condition, whereas bilateral SII responses peaking at 70-100 ms were enhanced and the peak latency was shortened. The peak latency of the responses in the SI and SII preceded the onset of the earliest voluntary muscle activation in each subject. Later bilateral perisylvian responses were also enhanced with movement. In conclusion, neural activities in the SI and SII evoked by task-relevant somatosensory signals are regulated differently by motor-related neural activities before the afferent inputs. The present findings indicate a difference in function between the SI and SII in somatosensory-motor regulation.
许多研究报告称,在灵长类动物中,初级和次级体感皮层(SI和SII)对与任务无关的刺激的反应存在与运动相关的调制。在本研究中,采用脑磁图(MEG)来检查人类SI和SII中神经反应的自上而下的离心调节,该调节针对的是触发自主运动的与任务相关的体感信号。九名健康成年人参与了该研究。视觉警告信号出现2秒后,向手腕处的右正中神经传递体感指令信号。三种警告信号告知参与者在指令信号出现时应执行的反应(右手食指休息或伸展、左手食指伸展)。体感刺激既用于产生神经反应,又用于触发自主运动,因此被视为与任务相关的信号。使用全头MEG系统记录反应。与对照条件相比,当信号触发自主运动时,SI周围的P35m反应幅度降低,而初级SI反应N20m未改变,而在70 - 100毫秒达到峰值的双侧SII反应增强,且峰值潜伏期缩短。SI和SII中反应的峰值潜伏期先于每个受试者最早的自主肌肉激活开始。随后双侧颞叶周围反应也随着运动增强。总之,在传入输入之前,与任务相关的体感信号诱发的SI和SII中的神经活动受到与运动相关的神经活动的不同调节。本研究结果表明,SI和SII在体感运动调节中的功能存在差异。