Dystonic Disorders Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effect of Peripheral Heterotopic Stimulation on Cortical Excitability in Dystonia
This study will use transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and electrical stimulation of
nerves to examine how the brain controls muscle movement in focal hand dystonia (writer's
cramp). Normally, when a person moves a finger, the brain's motor cortex prevents the other
fingers from moving involuntarily. Patients with focal hand dystonia have difficulty with
individualized finger movements, possibly due to increased excitability of the motor cortex.
Musicians, writers, typists, athletes and others whose work involves frequent repetitive
movements may develop focal dystonia of the hand.
Healthy normal volunteers and patients with focal dystonia 18 years of age and older may be
eligible for this study.
For the TMS procedure, subjects are seated in a comfortable chair with their hands placed on
a pillow on their lap. An insulated wire coil is placed on the scalp. A brief electrical
current is passed through the coil, creating a magnetic pulse that stimulates the brain. This
may cause muscle, hand or arm twitching if the coil is near the part of the brain that
controls movement, or it may induce twitches or transient tingling in the forearm, head or
face muscles. Subjects will be asked to move a finger. Just before this movement, a brief
electrical stimulation will be applied to the end of either the second or fifth finger. Metal
electrodes will be taped to the skin over the muscle for computer recording of the electrical
activity of the hand and arm muscles activated by the stimulation. The testing will last 2-3
hours.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the effect of sensory afferent input on surround inhibition in the motor cortex in dystonia. Surround inhibition is a cortical phenomenon, the function of which may be to suppress unwanted movements in surrounding muscles during voluntary actions. In support of this, a recent study showed that motor output to the little finger was reduced during self-paced, voluntary movements of the index finger, despite an increase in spinal excitability. Work has also shown that in relaxed muscles, homotopic and heterotopic peripheral stimulation results in time dependent modulation of motor cortical excitability. However, no studies have examined the relationship between volitional movement and sensory input on cortical surround inhibition, the phenomenon which we hypothesize to be defective in dystonia. The aim of this study then is to examine the changes in surround inhibition when electrical stimulation is applied to the finger being actively moved, leading to an inhibition of a surrounding finger (heterotopic inhibition), at different time intervals prior to the initiation of movement, to assess the effect of heterotopic peripheral stimulation on surround inhibition in dystonia patients compared to normal subjects. ;
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