Objective: In healthy subjects, the trough vs. no-trough phases of the sensorimotor µ-rhythm correspond to highvs. low-excitability states of the motor cortex (M1). We tested this excitability differentiation in the ipsilesional (iM1) and contralesional M1 (cM1) of chronic stroke patients. Methods: 19 chronic stroke patients received single-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), separately over the iM1 and cM1, during EEG recordings. High and low M1 excitability states were defined by binning a post-hoc estimate of the µ-phase at TMS delivery. TMS-evoked EEG potentials (TEPs) and time–frequency responses were characterized for excitability states and hemispheres. The motor function of the affected arm was tested by the Fugl-Meyer Assessment Upper Extremity (FMA-UE. Results: In cM1, TMS at the high- vs. low-excitability state resulted in larger TEP amplitudes and increased postpulse power in the beta band. In iM1, these modulations were not significant except for post-pulse beta power. This retained excitability differentiation significantly correlated with FMA-UE. Conclusions: The degree of excitability differentiation in iM1 depending on phase of the sensorimotor µ-rhythm correlates with individual affected upper extremity motor function. Significance: The degree of excitability differentiation in iM1 might serve as a new independent marker of motor recovery.
Motor cortex excitability states in chronic stroke patients probed by EEG-TMS / Brancaccio, Arianna; Tabarelli, Davide; Baur, David; Roesch, Johanna; Mahmoud, Wala; Ziemann, Ulf; Belardinelli, Paolo. - In: CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY. - ISSN 1388-2457. - 175:(2025), pp. 211074701-211074711. [10.1016/j.clinph.2025.2110747]
Motor cortex excitability states in chronic stroke patients probed by EEG-TMS
Brancaccio, Arianna;Tabarelli, Davide;Belardinelli, Paolo
2025-01-01
Abstract
Objective: In healthy subjects, the trough vs. no-trough phases of the sensorimotor µ-rhythm correspond to highvs. low-excitability states of the motor cortex (M1). We tested this excitability differentiation in the ipsilesional (iM1) and contralesional M1 (cM1) of chronic stroke patients. Methods: 19 chronic stroke patients received single-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), separately over the iM1 and cM1, during EEG recordings. High and low M1 excitability states were defined by binning a post-hoc estimate of the µ-phase at TMS delivery. TMS-evoked EEG potentials (TEPs) and time–frequency responses were characterized for excitability states and hemispheres. The motor function of the affected arm was tested by the Fugl-Meyer Assessment Upper Extremity (FMA-UE. Results: In cM1, TMS at the high- vs. low-excitability state resulted in larger TEP amplitudes and increased postpulse power in the beta band. In iM1, these modulations were not significant except for post-pulse beta power. This retained excitability differentiation significantly correlated with FMA-UE. Conclusions: The degree of excitability differentiation in iM1 depending on phase of the sensorimotor µ-rhythm correlates with individual affected upper extremity motor function. Significance: The degree of excitability differentiation in iM1 might serve as a new independent marker of motor recovery.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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