Tacchino Andrea, Bove Marco, Roccatagliata Luca, Luigi Mancardi Giovanni, Uccelli Antonio, Bonzano Laura
Department of Experimental Medicine, Section of Human Physiology, University of Genoa, Italy.
Department of Neuroscience, Rehabilitation, Ophthalmology, Genetics, Maternal and Child Health, University of Genoa, Genoa, Italy.
Brain Res. 2014 Oct 17;1585:91-8. doi: 10.1016/j.brainres.2014.08.031. Epub 2014 Aug 20.
Patients with Multiple Sclerosis (PwMS) with severe sensorimotor and cognitive deficits show reduced ability in motor sequence learning. Conversely, in PwMS with minimal disability (EDSS≤2), showing only subtle neurological impairments and no particular deficits in everyday life activities, motor sequence learning has been poorly addressed. Here, we investigated whether PwMS with minimal disability already show a specific impairment in motor sequence learning and which component of this process can be first affected in MS. We implemented a serial reaction time task based on thumb-to-finger opposition movements in response to visual stimuli. Each session included 14 blocks of 120 stimuli presented randomly or in ten repetitions of a 12-item sequence. Random (R) and sequence (S) blocks were temporally alternated (R1, R2, S1/S5, R3, S6/S10, R4). Random blocks were designed to evaluate the motor component; sequence blocks, beside the motor component, allowed to discriminate the procedural performance. Twenty-two PwMS and 22 control healthy subjects were asked to perform the task under implicit or explicit instructions (11 subjects for each experimental condition). PwMS with minimal disability improved motor performance in random blocks reducing response time with practice with a trend similar to control subjects, suggesting that short-term learning of simple motor tasks is nearly preserved at this disease stage. Conversely, they found difficulties in sequence-specific learning in implicit and explicit condition, with more pronounced impairment in the implicit condition. These findings could suggest an involvement of different circuits in implicit and explicit sequence learning that could deteriorate at different disease stages.
患有严重感觉运动和认知缺陷的多发性硬化症患者(PwMS)在运动序列学习方面能力下降。相反,对于残疾程度较轻(扩展残疾状态量表评分≤2)、仅表现出轻微神经功能障碍且在日常生活活动中无特定缺陷的PwMS患者,运动序列学习方面的研究较少。在此,我们研究了残疾程度较轻的PwMS患者在运动序列学习中是否已经表现出特定损伤,以及该过程的哪个组成部分在多发性硬化症中可能首先受到影响。我们实施了一项基于拇指对指运动以响应视觉刺激的序列反应时任务。每个实验环节包括14个块,每个块有120个随机呈现的刺激,或者是一个12项序列的十次重复。随机(R)块和序列(S)块在时间上交替出现(R1、R2、S1/S5、R3、S6/S10、R4)。随机块旨在评估运动成分;序列块除了运动成分外,还能区分程序性表现。22名PwMS患者和22名健康对照者被要求在隐式或显式指令下完成任务(每种实验条件下11名受试者)。残疾程度较轻的PwMS患者在随机块中通过练习提高了运动表现,反应时间缩短,趋势与对照者相似,这表明在该疾病阶段,简单运动任务的短期学习基本得以保留。相反,他们在隐式和显式条件下的序列特异性学习中存在困难,在隐式条件下损伤更为明显。这些发现可能表明隐式和显式序列学习涉及不同的神经回路,且在不同疾病阶段可能会恶化。