Abstract

Background: Cervical dystonia is a movement disorder causing abnormal postures and movements of the head. While the exact pathophysiology of cervical dystonia has not yet been fully elucidated, a growing body of evidence points to the cerebellum as an important node.Methods: Here, we examined the impact of cerebellar interference by transcranial magnetic stimulation on finger-tapping related brain activation and neurophysiological measures of cortical excitability and inhibition in cervical dystonia and controls. Bilateral continuous theta-burst stimulation was used to modulate cerebellar cortical excitability in 16 patients and matched healthy controls. In a functional magnetic resonance imaging arm, data were acquired during simple finger tapping before and after cerebellar stimulation. In a neurophysiological arm, assessment comprised motor-evoked potentials amplitude and cortical silent period duration. Theta-burst stimulation over the dorsal premotor cortex and sham stimulation (neurophysiological arm only) served as control conditions.Results: At baseline, finger tapping was associated with increased activation in the ipsilateral cerebellum in patients compared to controls. Following cerebellar theta-burst stimulation, this pattern was even more pronounced, along with an additional movement-related activation in the contralateral somatosensory region and angular gyrus. Baseline motor-evoked potential amplitudes were higher and cortical silent period duration shorter in patients compared to controls. After cerebellar theta-burst stimulation, cortical silent period duration increased significantly in dystonia patients.Conclusion: We conclude that in cervical dystonia, finger movements—though clinically non-dystonic—are associated with increased activation of the lateral cerebellum, possibly pointing to general motor disorganization, which remains subclinical in most body regions. Enhancement of this activation together with an increase of silent period duration by cerebellar continuous theta-burst stimulation may indicate predominant disinhibitory effects on Purkinje cells, eventually resulting in an inhibition of cerebello-thalamocortical circuits.

Highlights

  • Cervical dystonia is a movement disorder causing abnormal postures and movements of the head

  • We applied a complementary approach to challenge the role of CRB in Cervical dystonia (CD): First, we examined functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) brain activation during a simple finger tapping task along with neurophysiological measures of cortical excitability in CD patients as compared to healthy controls

  • Following Continuous Theta-Burst Stimulation (cTBS) at CRB, we found a significant increase of cortical silent period (CSP) duration in CD patients

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Summary

Introduction

Cervical dystonia is a movement disorder causing abnormal postures and movements of the head. Over the last years, a growing body of evidence points to the cerebellum (CRB) as an important node in dystonia pathophysiology [5,6,7,8] Most of this evidence originates from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies, from advanced techniques like functional [9, 10] and resting-state MRI [11], voxel-based morphometry (VBM) [12,13,14,15], or probabilistic tractography [16] in different cohorts of dystonia patients. Additional neurophysiological approaches like repetitive transcranial magnetic simulation (rTMS) can prove

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