Discipline of Physiology, School of Medical Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, 5005, Australia.
Exp Brain Res. 2010 Aug;205(1):57-68. doi: 10.1007/s00221-010-2332-1. Epub 2010 Jun 24.
The aim of this study was to examine corticomotor excitability and plasticity following repetitive thumb abduction training in left and right hands of young and old adults. Electromyographic recordings were obtained from the abductor pollicis brevis (APB) muscle of 12 young (aged 18-27 years) and 14 old (aged 63-75 years) adults. Motor training consisted of 300 ballistic abductions of the thumb to maximize peak abduction acceleration, with each hand tested in a separate session. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) over the primary motor cortex (M1) was used to assess changes in contralateral APB motor-evoked potentials (MEPs) and short-interval intracortical inhibition (SICI) before and after training. For young and old adults, APB MEP amplitude increased for both hands after training, which is indicative of use-dependent plasticity. However, the increase in MEP amplitude was 21% (P = 0.04) greater in the left (non-dominant) hand compared with the right (dominant) hand. This occurred despite a 40% greater improvement in peak thumb abduction acceleration (motor learning) for the right hand in young subjects compared with the left hand in young subjects (P < 0.04) and the right hand in old subjects (P < 0.01). Furthermore, no difference in use-dependent plasticity was observed between young and old adults, and SICI remained unchanged following ballistic training for both hands in all subjects. These findings suggest that there is greater strengthening of corticomotor circuits for control of the left compared with the right hand during simple ballistic thumb training and that an age-related decline in motor learning was observed only in the dominant hand. In contrast to previous studies, these data also indicate that young and old adults can demonstrate similar use-dependent corticomotor plasticity during this simple thumb-training task.
本研究旨在探讨在年轻人和老年人的左手和右手进行重复性拇指外展训练后,皮质运动兴奋性和可塑性的变化。通过肌电图记录,从 12 名年轻人(年龄 18-27 岁)和 14 名老年人(年龄 63-75 岁)的外展短肌(APB)中获得记录。运动训练包括 300 次弹丸式拇指外展,以最大限度地提高最大外展加速度,每只手在单独的测试中进行测试。经颅磁刺激(TMS)用于评估训练前后对大脑运动皮层(M1)的对侧 APB 运动诱发电位(MEP)和短程内抑制(SICI)的变化。对于年轻人和老年人,双手训练后 APB MEP 幅度均增加,表明存在依赖使用的可塑性。然而,左手(非优势手)的 MEP 幅度增加了 21%(P = 0.04),而右手(优势手)的 MEP 幅度增加了 13%。尽管年轻人右手的最大拇指外展加速度(运动学习)改善了 40%,而年轻人左手和老年人右手的改善程度均大于年轻人左手(P < 0.04)和老年人右手(P < 0.01)。此外,年轻人和老年人之间的依赖使用的可塑性没有差异,在所有受试者中,双手的弹丸训练后 SICI 保持不变。这些发现表明,在简单的弹丸拇指训练中,与右手相比,左手的皮质运动回路得到了更大的强化,而且仅在优势手中观察到与年龄相关的运动学习下降。与以前的研究不同,这些数据还表明,在这个简单的拇指训练任务中,年轻人和老年人都可以表现出相似的依赖使用的皮质运动可塑性。