4 research outputs found

    Relationship between temporal dynamics of intrinsic brain activity and motor function remodeling in patients with acute BGIS

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    Backgroundpatients with acute basal ganglia ischemic stroke (BGIS) show changes in local brain activity represented by the amplitude of low-frequency fluctuation (ALFF), but the time-varying characteristics of this local nerve activity are still unclear. This study aimed to investigate the abnormal time-varying local brain activity of patients with acute BGIS by using the ALFF method combined with the sliding-window approach.MethodsIn this study, 34 patients with acute BGIS with motor dysfunction and 44 healthy controls (HCs) were recruited. The dynamic amplitude of low-frequency fluctuation (dALFF) was employed to detect the alterations in brain activity induced by acute BGIS patients. A two-sample t-test comparison was performed to compare the dALFF value between the two groups and a Spearman correlation analysis was conducted to assess the relationship between the local brain activity abnormalities and clinical characteristics.ResultsCompared with HCs, the activity of neurons in the left temporal pole (TP), parahippocampal gyrus (paraHIP), middle occipital gyrus (MOG), dorsolateral superior frontal gyrus (SFGdl), medial cingulate cortex (MCC), right rectus, precuneus (PCu) and right cerebellum crus1 were significantly increased in patients with BGIS. In addition, we found that there was a negative correlation (r = −0.458, p = 0.007) between the dALFF value of the right rectus and the scores of the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS), and a positive correlation (r = 0.488, 0.499, p < 0.05) with the scores of the Barthel Index scale (BI) and the Fugl Meyer motor function assessment (FMA). ROC analysis results demonstrated that the area under the curves (AUC) of the right rectus was 0.880, p<0.001.ConclusionThe pattern of intrinsic brain activity variability was altered in patients with acute BGIS compared with HCs. The abnormal dALFF variability might be a potential tool to assess motor function in patients with acute BGIS and potentially inform the diagnosis of this disease

    The Effects of Limb Dominance on Cross-Education in a Four Week Resistance Training Program

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    Cross-education is known as the phenomenon of strength transfer from the trained side of the body to the untrained side of the body by unilateral resistance training. Research has shown that limb dominance has an effect on the amount of strength that is gained on the untrained side. Studies have found that there is a greater cross over effect in strength from the dominant side of the body to the non-dominant side of the body than vice versa. The present study examined this effect by taking 12 college females and splitting them into three groups: dominant training, non-dominant training, and control group. The hypothesis was that the dominant training group would have a greater increase in peak grip strength in the untrained, non-dominant arm than the arm of the untrained, dominant group of the non-dominant training group. The dominant training group only trained their dominant arm with a hand dynamometer, while the non-dominant training group only trained their non-dominant arm with the same hand dynamometer. Both groups went through a 4-week, 13 sessions of grip strength training on the handy dynamometer. They performed 3 sets of 6 maximal squeezes with a 2-minute rest in between sets. Pre-and post-tests were taken of maximum grip strength squeeze. There was no significance difference in peak grip strength between the untrained arms of both groups. Also, there was no significance difference in peak grip strength between the trained arms of both groups however there was a trend in data in the untrained arm of the dominant training group showing a slight increase in strength from baseline measurements. These findings do not directly support the hypothesis however, if the number of subjects\u27 value was greater, the trend in data in the dominant training group might have found significant effect from limb dominance

    ENCODING OF SALTATORY TACTILE VELOCITY IN THE ADULT OROFACIAL SOMATOSENSORY SYSTEM

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    Processing dynamic tactile inputs is a key function of somatosensory systems. Spatial velocity encoding mechanisms by the nervous system are important for skilled movement production and may play a role in recovery of motor function following neurological insult. Little is known about tactile velocity encoding in trigeminal networks associated with mechanosensory inputs to the face, or the consequences of movement. High resolution functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to investigate the neural substrates of velocity encoding in the human orofacial somatosensory system during unilateral saltatory pneumotactile inputs to perioral hairy skin in 20 healthy adults. A custom multichannel, scalable pneumotactile array consisting of 7 TAC-Cells was used to present 5 stimulus conditions: 5 cm/s, 25 cm/s, 65 cm/s, ALL-ON synchronous activation, and ALL-OFF. The spatial organization of cerebral and cerebellar blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) response as a function of stimulus velocity was analyzed using general linear modeling (GLM) of pooled group fMRI signal data. The sequential saltatory inputs to the lower face produced localized, predominantly contralateral BOLD responses in primary somatosensory (SI), secondary somatosensory (SII), primary motor (MI), supplemental motor area (SMA), posterior parietal cortices (PPC), and insula, whose spatial organization and intensity were highly dependent on velocity. Additionally, ipsilateral sensorimotor, insular and cerebellar BOLD responses were prominent during the lowest velocity (5 cm/s). Advisor: Steven M. Barlo

    ENCODING OF SALTATORY TACTILE VELOCITY IN THE ADULT OROFACIAL SOMATOSENSORY SYSTEM

    Get PDF
    Processing dynamic tactile inputs is a key function of somatosensory systems. Spatial velocity encoding mechanisms by the nervous system are important for skilled movement production and may play a role in recovery of motor function following neurological insult. Little is known about tactile velocity encoding in trigeminal networks associated with mechanosensory inputs to the face, or the consequences of movement. High resolution functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to investigate the neural substrates of velocity encoding in the human orofacial somatosensory system during unilateral saltatory pneumotactile inputs to perioral hairy skin in 20 healthy adults. A custom multichannel, scalable pneumotactile array consisting of 7 TAC-Cells was used to present 5 stimulus conditions: 5 cm/s, 25 cm/s, 65 cm/s, ALL-ON synchronous activation, and ALL-OFF. The spatial organization of cerebral and cerebellar blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) response as a function of stimulus velocity was analyzed using general linear modeling (GLM) of pooled group fMRI signal data. The sequential saltatory inputs to the lower face produced localized, predominantly contralateral BOLD responses in primary somatosensory (SI), secondary somatosensory (SII), primary motor (MI), supplemental motor area (SMA), posterior parietal cortices (PPC), and insula, whose spatial organization and intensity were highly dependent on velocity. Additionally, ipsilateral sensorimotor, insular and cerebellar BOLD responses were prominent during the lowest velocity (5 cm/s). Advisor: Steven M. Barlo
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