Vallence A-M, Smalley E, Drummond P D, Hammond G R
School of Psychology and Exercise Science, Murdoch University, Murdoch, Australia; and
School of Psychology and Exercise Science, Murdoch University, Murdoch, Australia; and.
J Neurophysiol. 2017 Sep 1;118(3):1581-1590. doi: 10.1152/jn.00794.2016. Epub 2017 Jun 21.
Aging is typically accompanied by a decline in manual dexterity and handedness; the dominant hand executes tasks of manual dexterity more quickly and accurately than the nondominant hand in younger adults, but this advantage typically declines with age. Age-related changes in intracortical inhibitory processes might play a role in the age-related decline in manual dexterity. Long-interval intracortical inhibition (LICI) is asymmetric in young adults, with more sensitive and more powerful LICI circuits in the dominant hemisphere than in the nondominant hemisphere. Here we investigated whether the hemispheric asymmetry in LICI in younger adults persists in healthy older adults. Paired-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation was used to measure LICI in the dominant and nondominant hemispheres of younger and older adults; LICI stimulus-response curves were obtained by varying conditioning stimulus intensity at two different interstimulus intervals [100 ms (LICI) and 150 ms]. We have replicated the finding that LICI circuits are more sensitive and more powerful in the dominant than the nondominant hemisphere of young adults and extend this finding to show that the hemispheric asymmetry in LICI is lost with age. In the context of behavioral observations showing that dominant hand movements in younger adults are more fluent than nondominant hand movements in younger adults and dominant hand movements in older adults, we speculate a role of LICI in the age-related decline in manual dexterity. In younger adults, more sensitive and more powerful long-interval intracortical inhibitory circuits are evident in the hemisphere controlling the more dexterous hand; this is not the case in older adults, for whom long-interval intracortical inhibitory circuits are symmetric and more variable than in younger adults. We speculate that the highly sensitive and powerful long-interval intracortical inhibition circuits in the dominant hemisphere play a role in manual dexterity.
衰老通常伴随着手部灵活性和利手性的下降;在年轻人中,优势手执行手部灵活性任务比非优势手更快、更准确,但这种优势通常会随着年龄增长而下降。皮质内抑制过程的年龄相关变化可能在与年龄相关的手部灵活性下降中起作用。在年轻人中,长时程皮质内抑制(LICI)是不对称的,优势半球的LICI回路比非优势半球更敏感、更强大。在这里,我们研究了年轻人中LICI的半球不对称性在健康老年人中是否仍然存在。采用配对脉冲经颅磁刺激来测量年轻人和老年人优势半球和非优势半球的LICI;通过在两个不同的刺激间隔[100毫秒(LICI)和150毫秒]改变条件刺激强度来获得LICI刺激-反应曲线。我们重复了这一发现,即年轻人优势半球的LICI回路比非优势半球更敏感、更强大,并扩展了这一发现,表明LICI的半球不对称性会随着年龄增长而消失。结合行为观察结果,即年轻人中优势手的动作比非优势手的动作更流畅,以及老年人中优势手的动作,我们推测LICI在与年龄相关的手部灵活性下降中起作用。在年轻人中,控制更灵活手部的半球中明显存在更敏感、更强大的长时程皮质内抑制回路;而在老年人中并非如此,他们的长时程皮质内抑制回路是对称的,且比年轻人更具变异性。我们推测优势半球中高度敏感且强大的长时程皮质内抑制回路在手部灵活性中起作用。