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Brain, Vol. 123, No. 12, 2475-2490, December 2000
© 2000 Oxford University Press

Multimodal EEG analysis in man suggests impairment-specific changes in movement-related electric brain activity after stroke

T. Platz1, I. H. Kim1, H. Pintschovius1, T. Winter1, A. Kieselbach1, K. Villringer2, R. Kurth2 and K.-H. Mauritz1

1 Klinik Berlin, Department of Neurological Rehabilitation, Freie Universität and 2 Department of Radiology, Universitätsklinikum Benjamin Franklin, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany

Correspondence to: Dr T. Platz, Klinik Berlin, Kladower Damm 223, 14089 Berlin, Germany

Movement-related slow cortical potentials and event-related desynchronization of alpha (alpha-ERD) and beta (beta-ERD) activity after self-paced voluntary triangular finger movements were studied in 13 ischaemic supratentorial stroke patients and 10 age-matched control subjects during movement preparation and actual performance. The stroke patients suffered from central arm paresis (n = 8), somatosensory deficits (n = 3) or ideomotor apraxia (n = 2). The multimodal EEG analysis suggested impairment-specific changes in the movement-related electrical activity of the brain. The readiness potential of paretic subjects was centred more anteriorly and laterally; during movement, they showed increased beta-ERD at left lateral frontal recording sites. Patients with somatosensory deficits showed reduced alpha-ERD and beta-ERD during both movement preparation and actual performance. Patients with ideomotor apraxia showed more lateralized frontal movement-related slow cortical potentials during both movement preparation and performance, and reduced left parietal beta-ERD during movement preparation. We conclude that (i) disturbed motor efference is associated with an increased need for excitatory drive of pyramidal cells in motor and premotor areas or an attempt to drive movements through projections from these areas to brainstem motor systems during movement preparation; (ii) an undisturbed somatosensory afference might contribute to the release of relevant cortical areas from their `idling' state when movements are prepared and performed; and (iii) apraxic patients have a relative lack of activity of the mesial frontal motor system and the left parietal cortex, which is believed to be part of a network subserving ideomotor praxis.


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