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  • Groppa, Sergiu (3)
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Subcortical volumes as early predictors of fatigue in multiple sclerosis (2022)
Fleischer, Vinzenz ; Ciolac, Dumitru ; Gonzalez‐Escamilla, Gabriel ; Grothe, Matthias ; Strauss, Sebastian ; Molina Galindo, Lara S. ; Radetz, Angela ; Salmen, Anke ; Lukas, Carsten ; Klotz, Luisa ; Meuth, Sven G. ; Bayas, Antonios ; Paul, Friedemann ; Hartung, Hans‐Peter ; Heesen, Christoph ; Stangel, Martin ; Wildemann, Brigitte ; Then Bergh, Florian ; Tackenberg, Björn ; Kümpfel, Tania ; Zettl, Uwe K. ; Knop, Matthias ; Tumani, Hayrettin ; Wiendl, Heinz ; Gold, Ralf ; Bittner, Stefan ; Zipp, Frauke ; Groppa, Sergiu ; Muthuraman, Muthuraman
The role of ipsilateral motor network in upper limb movement (2023)
Ding, Hao ; Seusing, Nelly ; Nasseroleslami, Bahman ; Anwar, Abdul Rauf ; Strauss, Sebastian ; Lotze, Martin ; Grothe, Matthias ; Groppa, Sergiu ; Muthuraman, Muthuraman
The execution of voluntary movements is primarily governed by the cerebral hemisphere contralateral to the moving limb. Previous research indicates that the ipsilateral motor network, comprising the primary motor cortex (M1), supplementary motor area (SMA), and premotor cortex (PM), plays a crucial role in the planning and execution of limb movements. However, the precise functions of this network and its interplay in different task contexts have yet to be fully understood. Twenty healthy right-handed participants (10 females, mean age 26.1 ± 4.6 years) underwent functional MRI scans while performing biceps brachii representations such as bilateral, unilateral flexion, and bilateral flexion-extension. Ipsilateral motor evoked potentials (iMEPs) were obtained from the identical set of participants in a prior study using transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) targeting M1 while employing the same motor tasks. The voxel time series was extracted based on the region of interest (M1, SMA, ventral PM and dorsal PM). Directed functinal connectivity was derived from the extracted time series using time-resolved partial directed coherence. We found increased connectivity from left-PMv to both sides M1, as well as right-PMv to both sides SMA, in unilateral flexion compared to bilateral flexion. Connectivity from left M1 to left-PMv, and left-SMA to right-PMd, also increased in both unilateral flexion and bilateral flexion-extension compared to bilateral flexion. However, connectivity between PMv and right-M1 to left-PMd decreased during bilateral flexion-extension compared to unilateral flexion. Additionally, during bilateral flexion-extension, the connectivity from right-M1 to right-SMA had a negative relationship with the area ratio of iMEP in the dominant side. Our results provide corroborating evidence for prior research suggesting that the ipsilateral motor network is implicated in the voluntary movements and underscores its involvement in cognitive processes such as movement planning and coordination. Moreover, ipsilateral connectivity from M1 to SMA on the dominant side can modulate the degree of ipsilateral M1 activation during bilateral antagonistic contraction.
The excitability of ipsilateral motor evoked potentials is not task-specific and spatially distinct from the contralateral motor hotspot (2024)
Seusing, Nelly ; Strauss, Sebastian ; Fleischmann, Robert ; Nafz, Christina ; Groppa, Sergiu ; Muthuraman, Muthuraman ; Ding, Hao ; Byblow, Winston D. ; Lotze, Martin ; Grothe, Matthias
Objective The role of ipsilateral descending motor pathways in voluntary movement of humans is still a matter of debate, with partly contradictory results. The aim of our study therefore was to examine the excitability of ipsilateral motor evoked potentials (iMEPs) regarding site and the specificity for unilateral and bilateral elbow flexion extension tasks. Methods MR-navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation mapping of the dominant hemisphere was performed in twenty healthy participants during tonic unilateral (iBB), bilateral homologous (bBB) or bilateral antagonistic elbow flexion-extension (iBB-cAE), the map center of gravity (CoG) and iMEP area from BB were obtained. Results The map CoG of the ipsilateral BB was located more anterior-laterally than the hotspot of the contralateral BB within the primary motor cortex, with a significant difference in CoG in iBB and iBB-cAE, but not bBB compared to the hotspot for the contralateral BB (each p < 0.05). However, different tasks had no effect on the size of the iMEPs. Conclusion Our data demonstrated that excitability of ipsilateral and contralateral MEP differ spatially in a task-specific manner suggesting the involvement of different motor networks within the motor cortex.
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