Elsevier

Brain Research

Volume 584, Issues 1–2, 3 July 1992, Pages 11-17
Brain Research

Evidence for a common network of brain structures involved in Parkinsonian tremor and voluntary repetitive movement

https://doi.org/10.1016/0006-8993(92)90872-7Get rights and content

Abstract

Repeated measurements of regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) were obtained in 7 patients who underwent a stereotactic thalamic electrode implantation in the nucleus ventralis intermedius (nVIM) of the thalamus for severe hemi-parkinsonian tremor. Using positron emission tomography and oxygen-15 labelled water, rCBF was studied in each patient in two conditions: in absence of tremor, e.g. under nVIM electrical stimulation, and in presence of tremor. X-ray tomograms permitted individual definition of anatomical regions of interest. In presence of tremor, normalized rCBF increases were observed in the following regions: postcentral (13.6±8.4%, P = 0.0003), precentral (7.7±8.8%, P = 0.016), paracentral (7.7±8.4%), supplementary motor (8.2±10.4%, P = 0.025), caudate nucleus (5.7±7.6%, P = 0.03), vermis (9.7±7.3%, P = 0.007), cerebellar grey nuclei (9±6%, P = 0.016) on the electrode side and on the contralateral vermis (17.8±7.5%, P = 0.0003) and cerebellar grey nuclei (22±6.3%, P = 0.0004). These results clearly indicate an activation of the sensory-motor cortex, as well as an involvement of the supplementary motor area and the cortico-cerebellar pathways in Parkinsonian resting tremor (PRT). They demonstrate that PRT shares common network of brain structures with repetitive voluntary movement.

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    This work has been presented in part at the 43rd Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Neurology (Boston, April 1991) and at the 35th International Symposium on Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism (Miami, June 1991).

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