Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

Relationship between event-related desynchronization and cortical excitability in healthy subjects and stroke patients.

The Tokai journal of experimental and clinical medicine(2013)

Cited 43|Views5
No score
Abstract
Relation between cortical excitability and magnitudes of event-related dysynchronizaton (ERD) has not been clarified. This study was investigated that relationshp between cortical excitability and ERD magnitudes in healthy subjects and stroke patients.Ten healthy subjects and four patients with stroke participated in this study. EEGs were recorded over the sensorimotor cortex (left hemisphere in healthy subjects; damaged hemisphere in stroke subjects) to calculate ERD during motor imagery,. Motor-evoked potential (MEP) induced by single-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation over the primary motor cortex was recorded from the first dorsal interosseus (FDI) muscle at ERD magnitudes of 10% and 30%.MEP significantly increased at 10% and 30% ERD (p<0.01) than that during rest in healthy subjects. The 30% ERD condition showed significantly higher MEP than that at 10% ERD (p<0.05). In stroke patients, MEP increased with ERD induced by motor imagery, but the change of MEP to ERD amplitude was critically different among the subject.ERD magnitude corresponds to corticospinal excitability increases in healthy subjects and patients with hemiplegic stroke. BCI based on motor imagery-induced ERD may be a potential rehabilitation strategy for patients with hemiplegic stroke.
More
Translated text
Key words
cortical excitability,stroke patients,desynchronization,event-related
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined