Interaction of transcranial magnetic stimulation and electrical transmastoid stimulation in human subjects

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Interaction of transcranial magnetic stimulation and electrical transmastoid stimulation in human subjects. / Taylor, Janet L; Petersen, Nicolas Caesar; Butler, Jane E; Gandevia, S C.

In: Journal of Physiology, Vol. 541, No. 3, 2002, p. 949-958.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Taylor, JL, Petersen, NC, Butler, JE & Gandevia, SC 2002, 'Interaction of transcranial magnetic stimulation and electrical transmastoid stimulation in human subjects', Journal of Physiology, vol. 541, no. 3, pp. 949-958.

APA

Taylor, J. L., Petersen, N. C., Butler, J. E., & Gandevia, S. C. (2002). Interaction of transcranial magnetic stimulation and electrical transmastoid stimulation in human subjects. Journal of Physiology, 541(3), 949-958.

Vancouver

Taylor JL, Petersen NC, Butler JE, Gandevia SC. Interaction of transcranial magnetic stimulation and electrical transmastoid stimulation in human subjects. Journal of Physiology. 2002;541(3):949-958.

Author

Taylor, Janet L ; Petersen, Nicolas Caesar ; Butler, Jane E ; Gandevia, S C. / Interaction of transcranial magnetic stimulation and electrical transmastoid stimulation in human subjects. In: Journal of Physiology. 2002 ; Vol. 541, No. 3. pp. 949-958.

Bibtex

@article{ee999560070011ddbee902004c4f4f50,
title = "Interaction of transcranial magnetic stimulation and electrical transmastoid stimulation in human subjects",
abstract = "Transcranial magnetic stimulation activates corticospinal neurones directly and transsynaptically and hence, activates motoneurones and results in a response in the muscle. Transmastoid stimulation results in a similar muscle response through activation of axons in the spinal cord. This study was designed to determine whether the two stimuli activate the same descending axons. Responses to transcranial magnetic stimuli paired with electrical transmastoid stimuli were examined in biceps brachii in human subjects. Twelve interstimulus intervals (ISIs) from -6 ms (magnet before transmastoid) to 5 ms were investigated. When responses to the individual stimuli were set at 10-15 % of the maximal M-wave, responses to the paired stimuli were larger than expected at ISIs of -6 and -5 ms but were reduced in size at ISIs of -2 to 1 ms and at 3 to 5 ms. With individual responses of 3-5 % of maximal M-wave, facilitation still occurred at ISIs of -6 and -5 ms and depression of the paired response at ISIs of 0, 1, 4 and 5 ms. The interaction of the response to transmastoid stimulation with the multiple descending volleys elicited by magnetic stimulation of the cortex is complex. However, depression of the response to the paired stimuli at short ISIs is consistent with an occlusive interaction in which an antidromic volley evoked by the transmastoid stimulus collides with and annihilates descending action potentials evoked by the transcranial magnetic stimulus. Thus, it is consistent with the two stimuli activating some of the same corticospinal axons.",
author = "Taylor, {Janet L} and Petersen, {Nicolas Caesar} and Butler, {Jane E} and Gandevia, {S C}",
note = "CURIS 2007 5200 218",
year = "2002",
language = "English",
volume = "541",
pages = "949--958",
journal = "The Journal of Physiology",
issn = "0022-3751",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Interaction of transcranial magnetic stimulation and electrical transmastoid stimulation in human subjects

AU - Taylor, Janet L

AU - Petersen, Nicolas Caesar

AU - Butler, Jane E

AU - Gandevia, S C

N1 - CURIS 2007 5200 218

PY - 2002

Y1 - 2002

N2 - Transcranial magnetic stimulation activates corticospinal neurones directly and transsynaptically and hence, activates motoneurones and results in a response in the muscle. Transmastoid stimulation results in a similar muscle response through activation of axons in the spinal cord. This study was designed to determine whether the two stimuli activate the same descending axons. Responses to transcranial magnetic stimuli paired with electrical transmastoid stimuli were examined in biceps brachii in human subjects. Twelve interstimulus intervals (ISIs) from -6 ms (magnet before transmastoid) to 5 ms were investigated. When responses to the individual stimuli were set at 10-15 % of the maximal M-wave, responses to the paired stimuli were larger than expected at ISIs of -6 and -5 ms but were reduced in size at ISIs of -2 to 1 ms and at 3 to 5 ms. With individual responses of 3-5 % of maximal M-wave, facilitation still occurred at ISIs of -6 and -5 ms and depression of the paired response at ISIs of 0, 1, 4 and 5 ms. The interaction of the response to transmastoid stimulation with the multiple descending volleys elicited by magnetic stimulation of the cortex is complex. However, depression of the response to the paired stimuli at short ISIs is consistent with an occlusive interaction in which an antidromic volley evoked by the transmastoid stimulus collides with and annihilates descending action potentials evoked by the transcranial magnetic stimulus. Thus, it is consistent with the two stimuli activating some of the same corticospinal axons.

AB - Transcranial magnetic stimulation activates corticospinal neurones directly and transsynaptically and hence, activates motoneurones and results in a response in the muscle. Transmastoid stimulation results in a similar muscle response through activation of axons in the spinal cord. This study was designed to determine whether the two stimuli activate the same descending axons. Responses to transcranial magnetic stimuli paired with electrical transmastoid stimuli were examined in biceps brachii in human subjects. Twelve interstimulus intervals (ISIs) from -6 ms (magnet before transmastoid) to 5 ms were investigated. When responses to the individual stimuli were set at 10-15 % of the maximal M-wave, responses to the paired stimuli were larger than expected at ISIs of -6 and -5 ms but were reduced in size at ISIs of -2 to 1 ms and at 3 to 5 ms. With individual responses of 3-5 % of maximal M-wave, facilitation still occurred at ISIs of -6 and -5 ms and depression of the paired response at ISIs of 0, 1, 4 and 5 ms. The interaction of the response to transmastoid stimulation with the multiple descending volleys elicited by magnetic stimulation of the cortex is complex. However, depression of the response to the paired stimuli at short ISIs is consistent with an occlusive interaction in which an antidromic volley evoked by the transmastoid stimulus collides with and annihilates descending action potentials evoked by the transcranial magnetic stimulus. Thus, it is consistent with the two stimuli activating some of the same corticospinal axons.

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 12068053

VL - 541

SP - 949

EP - 958

JO - The Journal of Physiology

JF - The Journal of Physiology

SN - 0022-3751

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 3591869