Brandt Valerie Cathérine, Patalay Praveetha, Bäumer Tobias, Brass Marcel, Münchau Alexander
Department of Paediatric and Adult Movement Disorders and Neuropsychiatry, Institute of Neurogenetics, University of Lübeck, Lübeck, Germany.
Department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology, University College London, London, UK.
Mov Disord. 2016 Aug;31(8):1155-62. doi: 10.1002/mds.26607. Epub 2016 Apr 8.
Tics are the defining feature in Tourette syndrome and can be triggered by watching tics or single voluntary movements. This automatic imitation of movements referred to as "echopraxia" has been ascribed to a failure in top-down inhibition of imitative response tendencies. Alternatively, it could be interpreted in the context of automatic overlearned behavior. To this end, we investigated 18 Tourette patients aged 28.22 years (9.44 standard deviation; 16 male) and 24 healthy controls (mean age 29.21 years [9.1 standard deviation]; 17 male) using an adapted version of an action-interference paradigm.
Patients were asked to respond to 2 different auditory tones with either a facial movement that was part of their tic repertoire (tic-like movement), or a facial movement that was not (nontic movement). Simultaneously, behaviorally irrelevant videos of the 2 same facial movements were presented, which were either compatible or incompatible with the movement executed by the patient. Movements in healthy controls were matched to those in the patients.
Healthy participants responded faster in compatible than in incompatible trials. Tourette patients showed the same effect for nontic movements. However, their responses were equally fast in incompatible and compatible trials when the movement they were asked to execute was a tic-like movement. Error rates did not differ between the groups.
The results suggest that tic-like movements do not occur as a consequence of a failure to inhibit motor output. Instead, tics might be considered highly overlearned behavior that can be triggered without interference by external, incompatible movement stimuli. © 2016 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.
抽动是抽动秽语综合征的典型特征,观看抽动或单个随意动作可引发抽动。这种被称为“模仿动作”的动作自动模仿现象,被归因于自上而下对模仿反应倾向的抑制失败。或者,它可以在自动过度学习行为的背景下进行解释。为此,我们使用动作干扰范式的改编版本,对18名年龄为28.22岁(标准差9.44;16名男性)的抽动秽语综合征患者和24名健康对照者(平均年龄29.21岁[标准差9.1];17名男性)进行了研究。
要求患者对两种不同的听觉音调做出反应,要么做出属于其抽动 repertoire 的面部动作(抽动样动作),要么做出不属于该 repertoire 的面部动作(非抽动动作)。同时,呈现与患者执行的动作相同的两种面部动作的行为无关视频,这些视频与患者执行的动作要么兼容,要么不兼容。健康对照者的动作与患者的动作相匹配。
在兼容试验中,健康参与者的反应比不兼容试验中更快。抽动秽语综合征患者在非抽动动作上表现出相同的效果。然而,当要求他们执行的动作是抽动样动作时,他们在不兼容和兼容试验中的反应同样快。两组之间的错误率没有差异。
结果表明,抽动样动作并非由于抑制运动输出失败而发生。相反,抽动可能被认为是高度过度学习的行为,可以在不受外部不兼容运动刺激干扰的情况下被触发。© 2016国际帕金森和运动障碍协会。