Title of article
Short and middle-latency Median Nerve (MN) SEPs recorded by depth electrodes in human pre-SMA and SMA-proper
Author/Authors
C. Barba، نويسنده , , M. Valeriani، نويسنده , , G. Colicchio، نويسنده , , F. Mauguière، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
11
From page
2664
To page
2674
Abstract
Objective
To analyse waveforms, latencies and amplitudes of Median Nerve (MN) SEPs recorded by stereotactically electrodes implanted in the SMA of 14 epileptic patients (9 in pre-SMA,3 in SMA-proper, 2 in both) in order to evaluate which short and middle-latency SEPs are generated in this area and which could be the physiological relevance of these responses.
Methods
Short and middle-latency MN SEPs were recorded by chronically implanted electrodes in the fronto-temporal cortex and in particular in the mesial frontal region of 14 drug-resistant epileptic patients. MN stimulations of 100 μs were delivered by skin electrodes at the wrist; stimulus intensity was adjusted slightly above the motor threshold.
Results
The main result of this study is that middle-latency SEPs were originated in pre-SMA but not in SMA-proper as demonstrated by both referential and bipolar recordings. In particular off-line computed bipolar traces between neighbouring contacts implanted in the pre-SMA and in the frontal external regions showed a phase reversal at the deepest contacts located in pre-SMA. Conversely, bipolar recordings between neighbouring contacts implanted in the SMA-proper and in the frontal external regions showed inversion recovery at more superficial contacts, implanted in area 6. Finally, we confirmed that no short-latency MN SEP (and in particular the N30) is originated in the whole SMA.
Conclusions
Among premotor areas, somatosensory inputs seem to reach pre-SMA and area 6 but not SMA-proper.
Significance
This study assessed that no scalp SEP in the first 100 ms after MN stimulus could be generated in SMA-proper
Keywords
epilepsy surgery , Evoked potentials , Somatosensory system
Journal title
Clinical Neurophysiology
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Clinical Neurophysiology
Record number
523450
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