Department of Clinical and Movement Neurosciences, Queen Square Institute of Neurology, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
Department of Neurology, IRCCS Humanitas Research Hospital, Milan, Italy.
Mov Disord. 2021 Apr;36(4):1015-1021. doi: 10.1002/mds.28427. Epub 2020 Dec 17.
Dystonia may have different neuroanatomical substrates and pathophysiology. This is supported by studies on the motor system showing, for instance, that plasticity is abnormal in idiopathic dystonia, but not in dystonia secondary to basal ganglia lesions.
The aim of this study was to test whether somatosensory inhibition and plasticity abnormalities reported in patients with idiopathic dystonia also occur in patients with dystonia caused by basal ganglia damage.
Ten patients with acquired dystonia as a result of basal ganglia lesions and 12 healthy control subjects were recruited. They underwent electrophysiological testing at baseline and after a single 45-minute session of high-frequency repetitive somatosensory stimulation. Electrophysiological testing consisted of somatosensory temporal discrimination, somatosensory-evoked potentials (including measurement of early and late high-frequency oscillations and the spatial inhibition ratio of N20/25 and P14 components), the recovery cycle of paired-pulse somatosensory-evoked potentials, and primary motor cortex short-interval intracortical inhibition.
Unlike previous reports of patients with idiopathic dystonia, patients with acquired dystonia did not differ from healthy control subjects in any of the electrophysiological measures either before or after high-frequency repetitive somatosensory stimulation, except for short-interval intracortical inhibition, which was reduced at baseline in patients compared to control subjects.
The data show that reduced somatosensory inhibition and enhanced cortical plasticity are not required for the clinical expression of dystonia, and that the abnormalities reported in idiopathic dystonia are not necessarily linked to basal ganglia damage. © 2020 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.
肌张力障碍可能有不同的神经解剖学基础和病理生理学。这一点得到了对运动系统的研究的支持,例如,研究表明特发性肌张力障碍的可塑性异常,但基底节损伤引起的肌张力障碍则没有。
本研究旨在测试特发性肌张力障碍患者中报道的感觉抑制和可塑性异常是否也发生在基底节损伤引起的肌张力障碍患者中。
招募了 10 名因基底节损伤而获得性肌张力障碍患者和 12 名健康对照者。他们在基线和单次 45 分钟高频重复感觉刺激后接受了电生理测试。电生理测试包括感觉时间辨别、感觉诱发电位(包括测量早期和晚期高频振荡以及 N20/25 和 P14 成分的空间抑制比)、感觉诱发电位的恢复周期,以及初级运动皮层短间隔内皮质抑制。
与特发性肌张力障碍患者的先前报告不同,获得性肌张力障碍患者在接受高频重复感觉刺激前后,在任何电生理测量中均与健康对照组无差异,除了短间隔内皮质抑制,与对照组相比,患者在基线时减少。
这些数据表明,感觉抑制减少和皮质可塑性增强不是肌张力障碍临床表现所必需的,特发性肌张力障碍中报道的异常不一定与基底节损伤有关。 © 2020 国际帕金森和运动障碍学会。