Mitchell W Kyle, Baker Mark R, Baker Stuart N
Department of Anatomy, Cambridge University, Cambridge CB2 3DY, UK.
J Physiol. 2007 Sep 1;583(Pt 2):567-79. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.2007.134031. Epub 2007 Jul 12.
Muscle responses to transcranial stimulation show high sweep-to-sweep variability, which may reflect an underlying noise process in the motor system. We examined whether response amplitude correlated with the level of prestimulus background EMG, and network oscillations. Transcranial magnetic or electrical stimulation was delivered to primary motor cortex whilst human subjects performed a precision grip task known to promote beta-band ( approximately 20 Hz) cortical oscillations. Responses were recorded from two intrinsic hand muscles. Response magnitude correlated significantly with the level of background EMG (mean r(2) = 0.20). Using a novel wavelet method, we quantified the amplitude and phase of oscillations in prestimulus sensorimotor EEG. Surprisingly, response magnitude showed no significant correlation with EEG oscillations at any frequency. However, oscillations in the prestimulus EMG were significantly correlated with response size; the correlation coefficient had peaks around 20 Hz. When oscillations in one muscle were used to predict response amplitude in a different muscle, correlations were substantially smaller. Finally, for each recording, we calculated the best possible prediction of response size obtainable from up to 20 measures of prestimulus EEG and EMG oscillations. Such optimal predictions had low correlation coefficients (mean r(2) = 0.2; 76% were below 0.3). We conclude that prestimulus oscillations, mainly in the beta-band, do explain some of the variability in responses to transcranial stimulation. Oscillations may likewise increase the noise of natural motor processing, explaining why this form of network activity is usually suppressed prior to dynamic movements. However, the majority of the variation is determined by other factors, which are not accessible by noninvasive recordings.
肌肉对经颅刺激的反应表现出高度的逐次扫描变异性,这可能反映了运动系统中潜在的噪声过程。我们研究了反应幅度是否与刺激前背景肌电图水平以及网络振荡相关。在人类受试者执行一项已知可促进β波段(约20Hz)皮层振荡的精确抓握任务时,将经颅磁刺激或电刺激施加到初级运动皮层。从两块手部固有肌记录反应。反应幅度与背景肌电图水平显著相关(平均r² = 0.20)。使用一种新颖的小波方法,我们量化了刺激前感觉运动脑电图振荡的幅度和相位。令人惊讶的是,反应幅度在任何频率下与脑电图振荡均无显著相关性。然而,刺激前肌电图的振荡与反应大小显著相关;相关系数在20Hz左右出现峰值。当用一块肌肉的振荡来预测另一块不同肌肉的反应幅度时,相关性显著变小。最后,对于每次记录,我们计算了从多达20次刺激前脑电图和肌电图振荡测量中可获得的对反应大小的最佳预测值。这种最佳预测的相关系数较低(平均r² = 0.2;76%低于0.3)。我们得出结论,主要是β波段的刺激前振荡确实解释了经颅刺激反应变异性的一部分。振荡同样可能增加自然运动处理的噪声,这解释了为什么在动态运动之前这种形式的网络活动通常会被抑制。然而,大部分变异是由其他因素决定的,这些因素无法通过非侵入性记录获取。