115 resultados para Motor rotation
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BACKGROUND: Cranial nerve schwannomas are radiologically characterized by nodular cranial nerve enhancement on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Schwannomas typically present with gradually progressive symptoms, but isolated reports have suggested that schwannomas may cause fluctuating symptoms as well. METHODS: This is a report of ten cases of presumed cranial nerve schwannoma that presented with transient or recurring ocular motor nerve deficits. RESULTS: Schwannomas of the third, fourth, and fifth nerves resulted in fluctuating deficits of all 3 ocular motor nerves. Persistent nodular cranial nerve enhancement was present on sequential MRI studies. Several episodes of transient oculomotor (III) deficts were associated with headaches, mimicking ophthalmoplegic migraine. CONCLUSIONS: Cranial nerve schwannomas may result in relapsing and remitting cranial nerve symptoms.
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OBJECTIVE: The objective was to compare a brief interdisciplinary psychotherapeutic intervention to standard care as treatments for patients recently diagnosed with severe motor conversion disorder or nonepileptic attacks. METHODS: This randomized controlled trial of 23 consecutive patients compared (a) an interdisciplinary psychotherapeutic intervention group receiving four to six sessions by a consultation liaison psychiatrist, the first and last sessions adding a neurological consultation and a joint psychiatric and neurological consultation, and (b) a standard care group. After intervention, patients were assessed at 2, 6 and 12 months with the Somatoform Dissociation Questionnaire (SDQ-20), Clinical Global Impression scale, Rankin scale, use of medical care, global mental health [Montgomery and Asberg Depression Rating Scale, Beck Depression Inventory, mental health component of Short Form (SF)-36] and quality of life (SF-36). We calculated linear mixed models. RESULTS: Our intervention brought a statistically significant improvement of physical symptoms [as measured by the SDQ-20 (P<.02) and the Clinical Global Impression scale (P=.02)] and psychological symptoms [better scores on the mental health component of the SF-36 (P<.05) and on the Beck Depression Inventory (P<.05)] and a reduction in new hospital stays after intervention (P<.05). CONCLUSION: A brief psychotherapeutic intervention taking advantage of a close collaboration with neurology consultants in the setting of consultation liaison psychiatry appears effective.
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Contralesional brain connectivity plasticity was previously reported after stroke. This study aims at disentangling the biological mechanisms underlying connectivity plasticity in the uninjured motor network after an ischemic lesion. In particular, we measured generalized fractional anisotropy (GFA) and magnetization transfer ratio (MTR) to assess whether poststroke connectivity remodeling depends on axonal and/or myelin changes. Diffusion-spectrum imaging and magnetization transfer MRI at 3T were performed in 10 patients in acute phase, at 1 and 6 months after stroke, which was affecting motor cortical and/or subcortical areas. Ten age- and gender-matched healthy volunteers were scanned 1 month apart for longitudinal comparison. Clinical assessment was also performed in patients prior to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). In the contralesional hemisphere, average measures and tract-based quantitative analysis of GFA and MTR were performed to assess axonal integrity and myelination along motor connections as well as their variations in time. Mean and tract-based measures of MTR and GFA showed significant changes in a number of contralesional motor connections, confirming both axonal and myelin plasticity in our cohort of patients. Moreover, density-derived features (peak height, standard deviation, and skewness) of GFA and MTR along the tracts showed additional correlation with clinical scores than mean values. These findings reveal the interplay between contralateral myelin and axonal remodeling after stroke.
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Les tâches nécessitant des manipulations et des transformations de figures géométriques et de formes, comme les tâches de rotation mentale, donnent lieu à des différences de performance entre hommes et femmes qui restent intrigantes. Plusieurs hypothèses ont été proposées pour expliquer ces différences. La plus récurrente porte sur les différences de stratégie globale vs locale utilisées pour traiter l'information. Bien que cette conjecture soit intéressante, elle reste difficile à opérationnaliser car elle englobe tous les mécanismes cognitifs (acquisition, conservation et récupération de l'information). Ce travail prend la forme d'un retour aux sources dans la mesure où il se base sur des recherches anciennes qui ont montré que les hommes perçoivent significativement mieux que les femmes la verticale et l'horizontale. Il teste l'hypothèse selon laquelle les hommes, comparativement aux femmes, présentent une plus forte indépendance au champ perceptif visuel et sont donc plus susceptibles d'utiliser la verticalité et l'horizontalité pour résoudre une tâche de rotation mentale. Une première série d'expériences s'est penchée sur la perception spatiale pour évaluer son impact sur la résolution d'une tâche impliquant la rotation mentale. Les résultats ont montré que seuls les hommes se référaient à la verticalité et à l'horizontalité pour résoudre la tâche. Une seconde série d'expériences ont investigué l'effet de la présence, ou absence, d'axes directionnels directement liés à une tâche de rotation mentale. Elles ont été menées également en environnement réel afin d'évaluer comment le déplacement actif ou passif, correspondant à un changement de perspective en lieu et place d'une rotation mentale, module la performance des hommes et des femmes. Les résultats n'ont pas mis en évidence de différence sexuelle. Notre hypothèse est vérifiée puisque c'est uniquement lorsque la tâche ne présente pas d'axes orthogonaux évidents mais implicites que seuls les hommes, plus indépendants au champ perceptif visuel que les femmes, utilisent la perception de la verticalité et de l'horizontalité pour améliorer leur compétence en rotation mentale. -- Tasks that require manipulation and transformation of geometric shapes and forms, like tasks of mental rotation and give rise to differences in performance between men and women, remain intriguing. Several hypotheses have been proposed to explain these differences. The most recurring hypothesis addresses differences in global versus local strategies for processing information. While this conjecture is interesting, it remains difficult to study because it encompasses all the cognitive mechanisms (acquisition, retention and output). This work returns to the sources, which are based on earlier research that shows that men are significantly better than women at perceiving verticality and horizontality. It tests the hypothesis according to which men, as compared to women, exhibit a greater independence on the perceptive visual field, and therefore are more susceptible to utilizing the verticality and the horizontality to solve a mental rotation task. A first set of experiments examined spatial perception in order to assess its impact on the resolution of a task involving mental rotation. The results showed that only men referred to the verticality and the horizontality to solve the task. A second series of experiments investigated the effect of a presence, or absence of directional axes directed tied to the task of mental rotation. They were also conducted in a real world environment to evaluate how the active or passive displacement, corresponding to a change in perspective instead of a mental rotation, modulates the performance of men and women. The results did not show sex differences. Our hypothesis is verified: it is only when the task presents no obvious, but implicit orthogonal axes that men, who exhibit a greater independence on the perceptive visual field than women, use the perception of verticality and horizontality to improve their competence in mental rotation.
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A cortical visuomotor network, comprising the medial intraparietal sulcus (mIPS) and the dorsal premotor area (PMd), encodes the sensorimotor transformations required for the on-line control of reaching movements. How information is transmitted between these two regions and which pathways are involved, are less clear. Here, we use a multimodal approach combining repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) to investigate whether structural connectivity in the 'reaching' circuit is associated to variations in the ability to control and update a movement. We induced a transient disruption of the neural processes underlying on-line motor adjustments by applying 1Hz rTMS over the mIPS. After the stimulation protocol, participants globally showed a reduction of the number of corrective trajectories during a reaching task that included unexpected visual perturbations. A voxel-based analysis revealed that participants exhibiting higher fractional anisotropy (FA) in the second branch of the superior longitudinal fasciculus (SLF II) suffered less rTMS-induced behavioral impact. These results indicate that the microstructural features of the white matter bundles within the parieto-frontal 'reaching' circuit play a prominent role when action reprogramming is interfered. Moreover, our study suggests that the structural alignment and cohesion of the white matter tracts might be used as a predictor to characterize the extent of motor impairments.
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In humans, action errors and perceptual novelty elicit activity in a shared frontostriatal brain network, allowing them to adapt their ongoing behavior to such unexpected action outcomes. Healthy and pathologic aging reduces the integrity of white matter pathways that connect individual hubs of such networks and can impair the associated cognitive functions. Here, we investigated whether structural disconnection within this network because of small-vessel disease impairs the neural processes that subserve motor slowing after errors and novelty (post-error slowing, PES; post-novel slowing, PNS). Participants with intact frontostriatal circuitry showed increased right-lateralized beta-band (12-24 Hz) synchrony between frontocentral and frontolateral electrode sites in the electroencephalogram after errors and novelty, indexing increased neural communication. Importantly, this synchrony correlated with PES and PNS across participants. Furthermore, such synchrony was reduced in participants with frontostriatal white matter damage, in line with reduced PES and PNS. The results demonstrate that behavioral change after errors and novelty result from coordinated neural activity across a frontostriatal brain network and that such cognitive control is impaired by reduced white matter integrity.
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INTRODUCTION: Cerebral palsy (CP) is the most common physical disability in childhood. It is a disorder resulting from sensory and motor impairments due to perinatal brain injury, with lifetime consequences that range from poor adaptive and social function to communication and emotional disturbances. Infants with CP have a fundamental disadvantage in recovering motor function: they do not receive accurate sensory feedback from their movements, leading to developmental disregard. Constraint-induced movement therapy (CIMT) is one of the few effective neurorehabilitative strategies shown to improve upper extremity motor function in adults and older children with CP, potentially overcoming developmental disregard. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This study is a randomised controlled trial of children 12-24 months corrected age studying the effectiveness of CIMT combined with motor and sensory-motor interventions. The study population will comprise 72 children with CP and 144 typically developing children for a total of N=216 children. All children with CP, regardless of group allocation will continue with their standard of care occupational and physical therapy throughout the study. The research material collected will be in the form of data from high-density array event-related potential scan, standardised assessment scores and motion analysis scores. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The study protocol was approved by the Institutional Review Board. The findings of the trial will be disseminated through peer-reviewed journals and scientific conferences. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT02567630.