Rocchi Lorenzo, Latorre Anna, Menozzi Elisa, Rispoli Vittorio, Rothwell John C, Berardelli Alfredo, Bhatia Kailash P
Department of Medical Sciences and Public Health, University of Cagliari, Cagliari, Italy.
Department of Clinical and Movement Neurosciences, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
Mov Disord. 2024 Dec;39(12):2220-2229. doi: 10.1002/mds.30011. Epub 2024 Sep 10.
Dystonia presents a growing concern based on evolving prevalence insights. Previous research found that, in cervical dystonia, high-frequency repetitive somatosensory stimulation (RSS; HF-RSS) applied on digital nerves paradoxically diminishes sensorimotor inhibitory mechanisms, whereas low-frequency RSS (LF-RSS) increases them. However, direct testing on affected body parts was not conducted.
This study aims to investigate whether RSS applied directly to forearm muscles involved in focal hand dystonia can modulate cortical inhibitory mechanisms and clinical symptoms.
We applied HF-RSS and LF-RSS, the latter either synchronously or asynchronously, on forearm muscles involved in dystonia. Outcome measures included paired-pulse somatosensory evoked potentials, spatial lateral inhibition measured by double-pulse somatosensory evoked potentials, short intracortical inhibition tested with transcranial magnetic stimulation, electromyographic activity from dystonic muscles, and behavioral measures of hand function.
Both synchronous and asynchronous low-frequency somatosensory stimulation improved cortical inhibitory interactions, indicated by increased short intracortical inhibition and lateral spatial inhibition, as well as decreased amplitude of paired-pulse somatosensory evoked potentials. Opposite effects were observed with high-frequency stimulation. Changes in electrophysiological markers were paralleled by behavioral outcomes: although low-frequency stimulations improved hand function tests and reduced activation of dystonic muscles, high-frequency stimulation operated in an opposite direction.
Our findings confirm the presence of abnormal homeostatic plasticity in response to RSS in the sensorimotor system of patients with dystonia, specifically in inhibitory circuits. Importantly, this aberrant response can be harnessed for therapeutic purposes through the application of low-frequency electrical stimulation directly over dystonic muscles. © 2024 The Author(s). Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.
基于不断演变的患病率见解,肌张力障碍日益受到关注。先前的研究发现,在颈部肌张力障碍中,施加于指神经的高频重复体感刺激(RSS;HF-RSS)反而会削弱感觉运动抑制机制,而低频RSS(LF-RSS)则会增强这些机制。然而,尚未对受影响的身体部位进行直接测试。
本研究旨在调查直接施加于局灶性手部肌张力障碍受累前臂肌肉的RSS是否能调节皮质抑制机制和临床症状。
我们对肌张力障碍受累的前臂肌肉施加HF-RSS和LF-RSS,后者以同步或异步方式进行。结果测量包括配对脉冲体感诱发电位、通过双脉冲体感诱发电位测量的空间侧向抑制、经颅磁刺激测试的短皮质内抑制、肌张力障碍肌肉的肌电图活动以及手部功能的行为测量。
同步和异步低频体感刺激均改善了皮质抑制相互作用,表现为短皮质内抑制和侧向空间抑制增加,以及配对脉冲体感诱发电位幅度降低。高频刺激则观察到相反的效果。电生理标志物的变化与行为结果平行:尽管低频刺激改善了手部功能测试并减少了肌张力障碍肌肉的激活,但高频刺激的作用方向相反。
我们的研究结果证实,肌张力障碍患者的感觉运动系统对RSS存在异常的稳态可塑性,特别是在抑制性回路中。重要的是,通过直接在肌张力障碍肌肉上施加低频电刺激,可以利用这种异常反应达到治疗目的。© 2024作者。《运动障碍》由Wiley Periodicals LLC代表国际帕金森和运动障碍协会出版。