Interhemispheric inhibition induced by transcranial magnetic stimulation over primary sensory cortex

The present study investigated whether the long-interval interhemispheric inhibition (LIHI) is induced by the transcranial magnetic stimulation over the primary sensory area (S1-TMS) without activation of the conditioning side of the primary motor area (M1) contributing to the contralateral motor ev...

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Main Authors: Yasuyuki Iwata, Yasutomo Jono, Hiroki Mizusawa, Atsushi Kinoshita, Koichi Hiraoka
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2016.00438/full
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spelling doaj-fa089c64fe6242bc8c3f8dc0ee6d48482020-11-25T03:46:32ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Human Neuroscience1662-51612016-08-011010.3389/fnhum.2016.00438210108Interhemispheric inhibition induced by transcranial magnetic stimulation over primary sensory cortexYasuyuki Iwata0Yasutomo Jono1Hiroki Mizusawa2Atsushi Kinoshita3Koichi Hiraoka4Graduate School of Osaka Prefecture UniversityGraduate School of Osaka Prefecture UniversityGraduate School of Osaka Prefecture UniversityGraduate School of Osaka Prefecture UniversityOsaka Prefecture UniversityThe present study investigated whether the long-interval interhemispheric inhibition (LIHI) is induced by the transcranial magnetic stimulation over the primary sensory area (S1-TMS) without activation of the conditioning side of the primary motor area (M1) contributing to the contralateral motor evoked potential (MEP), whether the S1-TMS-induced LIHI is dependent on the status of the S1 modulated by the tactile input, and whether the pathways mediating the LIHI are different from those mediating the M1-TMS-induced LIHI. In order to give the TMS over the S1 without eliciting the MEP, the intensity of the S1-TMS was adjusted to be the sub-motor-threshold level and the trials with the MEP response elicited by the S1-TMS were discarded online. The LIHI was induced by the S1-TMS given 40 ms before the test TMS in the participants with the attenuation of the tactile perception of the digit stimulation (TPDS) induced by the S1-TMS, indicating that the LIHI is induced by the S1-TMS without activation of the conditioning side of the M1 contributing to the contralateral MEP in the participants in which the pathways mediating the TPDS is sensitive to the S1-TMS. The S1-TMS-induced LIHI was positively correlated with the attenuation of the TPDS induced by the S1-TMS, indicating that the S1-TMS-induced LIHI is dependent on the effect of the S1-TMS on the pathways mediating the TPDS at the S1. In another experiment, the effect of the digit stimulation given before the conditioning TMS on the S1- or M1-TMS-induced LIHI was examined. The digit stimulation produces tactile input to the S1 causing change in the status of the S1. The S1-TMS-induced LIHI was enhanced when the S1-TMS was given in the period in which the tactile afferent volley produced by the digit stimulation just arrived at the S1, while the LIHI induced by above-motor-threshold TMS over the contralateral M1 was not enhanced by the tactile input. Thus, the S1-TMS-induced LIHI is dependent on the status of the S1 modulated by the tactile input, and the pathways mediating the sub-motor-threshold S1-TMS-induced LIHI are not the same as the pathways mediating the above-motor-threshold M1-TMS-induced LIHI.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2016.00438/fullTranscranial Magnetic Stimulationsomatosensory inputinterhemispheric inhibitionprimary motor areaprimary sensory area
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yasuyuki Iwata
Yasutomo Jono
Hiroki Mizusawa
Atsushi Kinoshita
Koichi Hiraoka
spellingShingle Yasuyuki Iwata
Yasutomo Jono
Hiroki Mizusawa
Atsushi Kinoshita
Koichi Hiraoka
Interhemispheric inhibition induced by transcranial magnetic stimulation over primary sensory cortex
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation
somatosensory input
interhemispheric inhibition
primary motor area
primary sensory area
author_facet Yasuyuki Iwata
Yasutomo Jono
Hiroki Mizusawa
Atsushi Kinoshita
Koichi Hiraoka
author_sort Yasuyuki Iwata
title Interhemispheric inhibition induced by transcranial magnetic stimulation over primary sensory cortex
title_short Interhemispheric inhibition induced by transcranial magnetic stimulation over primary sensory cortex
title_full Interhemispheric inhibition induced by transcranial magnetic stimulation over primary sensory cortex
title_fullStr Interhemispheric inhibition induced by transcranial magnetic stimulation over primary sensory cortex
title_full_unstemmed Interhemispheric inhibition induced by transcranial magnetic stimulation over primary sensory cortex
title_sort interhemispheric inhibition induced by transcranial magnetic stimulation over primary sensory cortex
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
issn 1662-5161
publishDate 2016-08-01
description The present study investigated whether the long-interval interhemispheric inhibition (LIHI) is induced by the transcranial magnetic stimulation over the primary sensory area (S1-TMS) without activation of the conditioning side of the primary motor area (M1) contributing to the contralateral motor evoked potential (MEP), whether the S1-TMS-induced LIHI is dependent on the status of the S1 modulated by the tactile input, and whether the pathways mediating the LIHI are different from those mediating the M1-TMS-induced LIHI. In order to give the TMS over the S1 without eliciting the MEP, the intensity of the S1-TMS was adjusted to be the sub-motor-threshold level and the trials with the MEP response elicited by the S1-TMS were discarded online. The LIHI was induced by the S1-TMS given 40 ms before the test TMS in the participants with the attenuation of the tactile perception of the digit stimulation (TPDS) induced by the S1-TMS, indicating that the LIHI is induced by the S1-TMS without activation of the conditioning side of the M1 contributing to the contralateral MEP in the participants in which the pathways mediating the TPDS is sensitive to the S1-TMS. The S1-TMS-induced LIHI was positively correlated with the attenuation of the TPDS induced by the S1-TMS, indicating that the S1-TMS-induced LIHI is dependent on the effect of the S1-TMS on the pathways mediating the TPDS at the S1. In another experiment, the effect of the digit stimulation given before the conditioning TMS on the S1- or M1-TMS-induced LIHI was examined. The digit stimulation produces tactile input to the S1 causing change in the status of the S1. The S1-TMS-induced LIHI was enhanced when the S1-TMS was given in the period in which the tactile afferent volley produced by the digit stimulation just arrived at the S1, while the LIHI induced by above-motor-threshold TMS over the contralateral M1 was not enhanced by the tactile input. Thus, the S1-TMS-induced LIHI is dependent on the status of the S1 modulated by the tactile input, and the pathways mediating the sub-motor-threshold S1-TMS-induced LIHI are not the same as the pathways mediating the above-motor-threshold M1-TMS-induced LIHI.
topic Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation
somatosensory input
interhemispheric inhibition
primary motor area
primary sensory area
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2016.00438/full
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