Bracco L, Giovannelli F, Bessi V, Borgheresi A, Di Tullio A, Sorbi S, Zaccara G, Cincotta M
Department of Neurological and Psychiatric Sciences, University of Florence, Florence Health Authority, Florence, Italy.
Neurology. 2009 Mar 10;72(10):928-34. doi: 10.1212/01.wnl.0000344153.68679.37.
In amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI), functional neuronal connectivity may be altered, as suggested by quantitative EEG and neuroimaging data. In young healthy humans, the execution of linguistic tasks modifies the excitability of the hand area of the dominant primary motor cortex (M1(hand)), as tested by transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). We used TMS to investigate functional connectivity between language-related cortical areas and M1(hand) in aMCI.
Ten elderly women with aMCI and 10 age-matched women were recruited. All participants were right handed and underwent a neuropsychological evaluation. In the first TMS experiment, participants performed three different tasks: reading aloud, viewing of non-letter strings (baseline), and nonverbal oral movements. The second experiment included the baseline condition and three visual searching/matching tasks using letters, geometric shapes, or digits as target stimuli.
In controls, motor evoked potentials (MEP) elicited by suprathreshold TMS of the left M1(hand) were significantly larger during reading aloud (170% baseline) than during nonverbal oral movements, whereas no difference was seen for right M1(hand) stimulation. Similarly, MEP elicited by left M1(hand) stimulation during letter and shape searching/matching tasks were significantly larger compared to digit task. In contrast, linguistic task performance did not produce any significant MEP modulation in patients with aMCI, although neuropsychological evaluation showed normal language abilities.
Findings suggest that functional connectivity between the language-related brain regions and the dominant M1(hand) may be altered in amnestic mild cognitive impairment. Follow-up studies will reveal whether transcranial magnetic stimulation application during linguistic tasks may contribute to characterize the risk of conversion to Alzheimer disease.
定量脑电图和神经影像学数据表明,在遗忘型轻度认知障碍(aMCI)中,功能性神经元连接可能会发生改变。在年轻健康人群中,经颅磁刺激(TMS)测试显示,执行语言任务会改变优势初级运动皮层(M1(手区))手部区域的兴奋性。我们使用TMS来研究aMCI患者语言相关皮层区域与M1(手区)之间的功能连接。
招募了10名患有aMCI的老年女性和10名年龄匹配的女性。所有参与者均为右利手,并接受了神经心理学评估。在第一个TMS实验中,参与者执行三项不同任务:大声朗读、观看非字母字符串(基线)和非言语口腔动作。第二个实验包括基线条件以及三项使用字母、几何形状或数字作为目标刺激的视觉搜索/匹配任务。
在对照组中,左M1(手区)阈上TMS诱发的运动诱发电位(MEP)在大声朗读时(为基线的170%)显著大于非言语口腔动作时,而右M1(手区)刺激时未见差异。同样,在字母和形状搜索/匹配任务中,左M1(手区)刺激诱发的MEP显著大于数字任务时。相比之下,尽管神经心理学评估显示aMCI患者语言能力正常,但语言任务表现并未在这些患者中产生任何显著的MEP调制。
研究结果表明,在遗忘型轻度认知障碍中,语言相关脑区与优势M1(手区)之间的功能连接可能会发生改变。后续研究将揭示在语言任务期间应用经颅磁刺激是否有助于表征向阿尔茨海默病转化的风险。