Abstract

Electrophysiological and behavioral studies in primary dystonia suggest abnormalities during movement preparation, but this crucial phase preceding movement onset has not yet been studied specifically with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). To identify abnormalities in brain activation during movement preparation, we used event-related fMRI to analyze behaviorally unimpaired sequential finger movements in 18 patients with task-specific focal hand dystonia (FHD) and 18 healthy subjects. Patients and controls executed self-initiated or externally cued prelearnt four-digit sequential movements using either right or left hands. In FHD patients, motor performance of the sequential finger task was not associated with task-related dystonic posturing and their activation levels during motor execution were highly comparable with controls. On the other hand reduced activation was observed during movement preparation in the FHD patients in left premotor cortex / precentral gyrus for all conditions, and for self-initiation additionally in supplementary motor area, left mid-insula and anterior putamen, independent of effector side. Findings argue for abnormalities of early stages of motor control in FHD, manifesting during movement preparation. Since deficits map to regions involved in the coding of motor programs, we propose that task-specific dystonia is characterized by abnormalities during recruitment of motor programs: these do not manifest at the behavioral level during simple automated movements, however, errors in motor programs of complex movements established by extensive practice (a core feature of FHD), trigger the inappropriate movement patterns observed in task-specific dystonia.

Highlights

  • Abnormal central nervous system (CNS) function has been documented in nearly every region that is relevant for motor control and sensorimotor processing [1,2]

  • Structural imaging techniques [9,10], and, in particular, functional neuroimaging like positron emission tomography (PET) and functional MRI, have substantially contributed to our understanding of the disease

  • The outstanding task-specificity of some primary focal dystonias has led to the hypothesis of impaired motor programs [29,35]

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Summary

Introduction

Abnormal central nervous system (CNS) function has been documented in nearly every region that is relevant for motor control and sensorimotor processing [1,2]. Some of the possible reasons for these inconsistencies are different and sometimes mixed patient populations, relatively small patient numbers in some studies, use of different control groups, and use of variable motor tasks It has been shown, for instance, that abnormalities of brain activity in focal dystonia are correlated with task complexity [10,15,16,17,18], duration [19], and severity of symptoms [13,15,19]

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