Corticospinal Excitability in Humans during Motor Imagery Coupled with Functional Electrical Stimulation


Цитировать

Полный текст

Открытый доступ Открытый доступ
Доступ закрыт Доступ предоставлен
Доступ закрыт Только для подписчиков

Аннотация

18 Healthy volunteers were involved and the effect of functional neuromuscular electrical stimulation, which causes flexion of the hand on the corticospinal excitability during motor imaging and resting state, was investigated in this study. It was shown that the combined action of functional electrical stimulation and the kinesthetic motor imagery leads to an increase of the amplitude of motor evoked potentials, caused by a single-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation. At the same time, in the state of motor rest, this effect was not obtained. Since a change in corticospinal excitability at the cortical level may affect the processes of plastic reorganization necessary for the restoration of motor functions after strokes and other neurotraumas, the results of this work have a direct practical potential. In particular, the possibility of creating effective training complexes for the motor recovery based on motor imagery brain-computer interfaces with functional neuromuscular stimulation as a sensorimotor feedback is discussed. Rehabilitation with the use of such training complexes will help to elucidate the mechanisms of motor recovery, which are based on the phenomena of neuroplasticity due to changes in the excitability of neurons of the sensorimotor cortex.

Об авторах

L. Yakovlev

Department of Human and Animal Physiology, School of Biology, Moscow State University

Автор, ответственный за переписку.
Email: leojackovlev@gmail.com
Россия, Moscow, 119234

N. Syrov

Department of Human and Animal Physiology, School of Biology, Moscow State University

Email: leojackovlev@gmail.com
Россия, Moscow, 119234

E. Morozova

Department of Human and Animal Physiology, School of Biology, Moscow State University

Email: leojackovlev@gmail.com
Россия, Moscow, 119234

A. Kaplan

Department of Human and Animal Physiology, School of Biology, Moscow State University; Center for Bioelectric Interfaces, Institute for Cognitive Neuroscience, National Research University Higher School
of Economics

Email: leojackovlev@gmail.com
Россия, Moscow, 119234; Moscow, 101000

Дополнительные файлы

Доп. файлы
Действие
1. JATS XML

© Allerton Press, Inc., 2019

Согласие на обработку персональных данных

 

Используя сайт https://journals.rcsi.science, я (далее – «Пользователь» или «Субъект персональных данных») даю согласие на обработку персональных данных на этом сайте (текст Согласия) и на обработку персональных данных с помощью сервиса «Яндекс.Метрика» (текст Согласия).