Abstract

Objective: Intracortical excitability was studied for 4 muscles in the upper extremity by paired transcranial magnetic stimulation on the motor cortex, using focal and non-focal coils.Methods: Surface EMG responses of two hand and two forearm muscles were simultaneously recorded in 13 healthy subjects, after delivering paired stimuli at interstimulus intervals (ISIs) of 1–50 ms using circular and figure-of-8 (focal) coils. The intensities of conditioning and test stimuli were submotor and supramotor thresholds, respectively.Results: Paired stimulation using a circular coil showed constant inhibition at 2 ms ISI for all muscles, but not at 5 ms ISI, and induced facilitation at 10 ms ISI. The results using a focal coil were similar to those with a circular coil at all ISIs except at 5 ms ISI, where the former showed inhibition. At 20 and 30 ms ISIs, there was interindividual variability for both coils, some subjects showing inhibition and others facilitation.Conclusions: The difference of the inhibition at 5 ms ISI between using circular and focal coils could be attributed to the cortical mechanism. The inhibitory effect at 2 ms ISI, consistently observed for the 4 muscles with both types of coil, could be easily applied to assess the inhibitory intracortical function in patients with neurological diseases.

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