Turner R S, Grafton S T, Votaw J R, Delong M R, Hoffman J M
Department of Neurology, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia 30322, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 1998 Oct;80(4):2162-76. doi: 10.1152/jn.1998.80.4.2162.
The influence of changes in the mean velocity of movement on regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) was studied using positron emission tomography (PET) in nine healthy right-handed adults while they performed a smooth pursuit visuomanual tracking task. Images of relative rCBF were obtained while subjects moved a hand-held joystick to track the movement of a target at three different rates of a sinusoidal displacement (0.1, 0.4, and 0.7 Hz). Significant changes in rCBF between task conditions were detected using analysis of variance and weighted linear contrasts. The kinematics of arm and eye movements indicated that subjects performed tasks in a similar manner, particularly during the faster two tracking conditions. Significant increases in rCBF during arm movement (relative to an eye tracking only control condition) were detected in a widespread network of areas known for their involvement in motor control. The activated areas included primary sensorimotor (M1S1), dorsal and mesial premotor, and dorsal parietal cortices in the left hemisphere and to a lesser extent the sensorimotor and superior parietal cortices in the right hemisphere. Subcortically, activations were found in the left putamen, globus pallidus (GP), and thalamus, in the right basal ganglia, and in the right anterior cerebellum. Within the cerebral volume activated with movement, three areas had changes in rCBF that correlated positively with the rate of movement: left M1S1, left GP, and right anterior cerebellum. No movement-related sites had rCBF that correlated negatively with the rate of movement. Regressions of mean percent change (MPC) in rCBF onto mean hand velocity yielded two nonoverlapping subpopulations of movement-related loci, the three sites with significant rate effects and regression slopes steeper than 0.17 MPC.cm-1.s-1 and all other sites with nonsignificant rate effects and regression slopes below 0.1 MPC.cm-1. s-1. Moreover, the effects of movement per se and of movement velocity varied in magnitude independently. These results confirm previous reports that movement-related activations of M1S1 and cerebellum are sensitive to movement frequency or some covarying parameter of movement. The activation of GP with increasing movement velocity, not described in previous functional-imaging studies, supports the hypothesis that the basal ganglia motor circuit may be involved preferentially in controlling or monitoring the scale and/or dynamics of arm movements. The remaining areas that were activated equally for all movement rates may be involved in controlling higher level aspects of motor control that are independent of movement dynamics.
利用正电子发射断层扫描(PET)技术,对9名健康的右利手成年人在进行平稳跟踪视觉手动追踪任务时,运动平均速度变化对局部脑血流量(rCBF)的影响进行了研究。当受试者以三种不同的正弦位移速率(0.1、0.4和0.7Hz)移动手持操纵杆来跟踪目标运动时,获取了相对rCBF的图像。使用方差分析和加权线性对比检测任务条件之间rCBF的显著变化。手臂和眼睛运动的运动学表明,受试者以相似的方式执行任务,尤其是在较快的两种跟踪条件下。在一个广泛的已知参与运动控制的区域网络中,检测到手臂运动期间(相对于仅眼睛跟踪的对照条件)rCBF显著增加。激活区域包括左半球的初级感觉运动区(M1S1)、背侧和内侧运动前区以及顶叶背侧皮质,右半球的感觉运动区和顶上叶皮质激活程度较低。在皮质下,在左侧壳核、苍白球(GP)和丘脑、右侧基底神经节以及右侧小脑前叶发现了激活。在因运动而激活的脑区内,有三个区域的rCBF变化与运动速率呈正相关:左侧M1S1、左侧GP和右侧小脑前叶。没有与运动相关的部位其rCBF与运动速率呈负相关。将rCBF的平均百分比变化(MPC)回归到平均手部速度上,产生了两个不重叠的与运动相关位点的亚群,三个具有显著速率效应且回归斜率大于0.17 MPC.cm-1.s-1的位点,以及所有其他具有不显著速率效应且回归斜率低于0.1 MPC.cm-1.s-1的位点。此外,运动本身的效应和运动速度的效应在大小上独立变化。这些结果证实了先前的报道,即M1S1和小脑的与运动相关的激活对运动频率或一些运动的协变参数敏感。随着运动速度增加GP的激活,在先前的功能成像研究中未描述,支持了基底神经节运动回路可能优先参与控制或监测手臂运动的规模和/或动力学的假设。所有运动速率下均同等激活的其余区域可能参与控制与运动动力学无关的运动控制的更高层次方面。