Relationship between event-related desynchronization and cortical excitability in healthy subjects and stroke patients
- PMID: 24318283
Relationship between event-related desynchronization and cortical excitability in healthy subjects and stroke patients
Abstract
Objective: 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.
Methods: 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%.
Results: 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.
Conclusion: 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.
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