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. 2001 Sep-Oct;51(5):583-91.

[Somatosensory evoked potentials during natural and learned patterns of postural adjustment, accompanying limb movements in dogs]

[Article in Russian]
Affiliations
  • PMID: 11764517

[Somatosensory evoked potentials during natural and learned patterns of postural adjustment, accompanying limb movements in dogs]

[Article in Russian]
T Gavrilenko et al. Zh Vyssh Nerv Deiat Im I P Pavlova. 2001 Sep-Oct.

Abstract

A goal of the study was to investigate cortical reorganization corresponding to inhibition of innate motor patterns during motor learning. Functional changes in the sensorimotor cortex during learned rearrangement of the natural diagonal pattern of postural adjustment (PA) accompanying a hindlimb movement into a new one, the so-called unilateral pattern, were studied in dogs by testing somatosensory evoked potentials (SEP) in response to stimulation of a forelimb during PA immediately before the limb movement onset. During PA the latency and the amplitude of several SEP components decreased. In general, changes in SEP were less pronounced in the learned unilateral pattern of postural adjustment in comparison with the innate diagonal pattern, but the difference was significant only for some SEP components. The SEP late positivity in the learned postural pattern was replaced by a negativity. The SEP changes were similar independently of whether the test stimulus was applied on the forelimb loaded or unloaded during postural adjustment. The data suggest that changes in interrelations between different neuronal populations in the sensorimotor cortex during formation and realization of a learned motor program can be reflected in SEP changes.

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