Department of Physical Therapy and Human Movement Sciences, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, 645 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, IL 60611, USA.
J Physiol. 2012 Feb 15;590(4):919-36. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.2011.219592. Epub 2011 Nov 28.
Previous studies have shown that preplanned movements can be rapidly released when a startling acoustic stimulus (SAS) is presented immediately prior to, or coincident with, the imperative signal to initiate movement. Based on the short latency of the onset of muscle activity (typically in less than 90 ms) and the frequent co-expression of startle responses in the neck and eye muscles, it has been proposed that the release of planned movements by a SAS is mediated by subcortical, possibly brainstem, pathways. However, a role for cortical structures in mediating these responses cannot be ruled out based on timing arguments alone. We examined the role of the cortex in the mediation of these responses by testing if a suprathreshold transcranial magnetic stimulation applied over the primary motor cortex, which suppresses voluntary drive and is known to delay movement initiation, could delay the release of movement by a SAS. Eight subjects performed an instructed-delay task requiring them to make a ballistic wrist movement to a target in response to an acoustic tone (control task condition). In a subset of trials subjects received one of the following: (1) suprathreshold TMS over the contralateral primary motor cortex 70 ms prior to their mean response time on control trials (TMS(CT)), (2) SAS 200 ms prior to the go cue (SAS), (3) suprathreshold TMS 70 ms prior to the mean SAS-evoked response time (TMS(SAS)), or (4) TMS(SAS) and SAS presented concurrently (TMS+SAS). Movement kinematics and EMG from the wrist extensors and flexors and sternocleidomastoid muscles were recorded. The application of TMS(CT) prior to control voluntary movements produced a significant delay in movement onset times (P < 0.001) (average delay = 37.7 ± 12.8 ms). The presentation of a SAS alone at -200 ms resulted in the release of the planned movement an average of 71.7 ± 2.7 ms after the startling stimulus. The early release of movement by a SAS was significantly delayed (P < 0.001, average delay = 35.0 ± 12.9 ms) when TMS(SAS) and SAS were presented concurrently. This delay could not be explained by a prolonged suppression of motor unit activity at the spinal level. These findings provide evidence that the release of targeted ballistic wrist movements by SAS is mediated, in part, by a fast conducting transcortical pathway via the primary motor cortex.
先前的研究表明,当惊声刺激(SAS)在发出运动指令信号之前或与之同时出现时,预先计划的运动可以迅速释放。基于肌肉活动起始的潜伏期很短(通常不到 90 毫秒),以及颈部和眼部肌肉中经常共同表达的惊跳反应,有人提出 SAS 释放计划运动是通过皮质下的,可能是脑干的,途径来介导的。然而,仅根据时间论点,不能排除皮质结构在介导这些反应中的作用。我们通过测试超阈值经颅磁刺激(TMS)是否可以延迟 SAS 释放运动,来检验皮质在介导这些反应中的作用,超阈值 TMS 施加于对侧初级运动皮层,抑制自主驱动并已知会延迟运动起始。八名受试者执行了一项指令延迟任务,要求他们在响应声刺激时进行弹道腕部运动以到达目标(对照任务条件)。在试验的一部分中,受试者接受以下一种处理:(1)在对照试验的平均反应时间之前 70 毫秒,给予对侧初级运动皮层的超阈值 TMS(TMS(CT)),(2)在 Go 提示前 200 毫秒给予 SAS(SAS),(3)在平均 SAS 诱发的反应时间之前 70 毫秒给予超阈值 TMS(TMS(SAS)),或(4)TMS(SAS)和 SAS 同时呈现(TMS+SAS)。记录来自腕伸肌和屈肌以及胸锁乳突肌的运动运动学和肌电图。在对照自愿运动之前应用 TMS(CT)会导致运动起始时间明显延迟(P<0.001)(平均延迟=37.7±12.8 毫秒)。单独呈现 SAS 会导致计划运动在惊跳刺激后平均 71.7±2.7 毫秒释放。当 TMS(SAS)和 SAS 同时呈现时,SAS 早期释放运动的时间明显延迟(P<0.001,平均延迟=35.0±12.9 毫秒)。这一延迟不能用脊髓水平运动单位活动的延长抑制来解释。这些发现提供了证据,表明 SAS 通过初级运动皮层介导的快速传导皮质通路,部分介导了靶向弹道腕部运动的释放。