| Role
of the Ipsilateral Motor Cortex in Voluntary Movement - Review
Article
Robert
Chen, Leonardo G. Cohen and Mark Hallett
Abstract:
The ipsilateral primary motor cortex (M1) plays a role in
voluntary movement. In our studies, we used repetitive transcranial
magnetic stimulation (rTMS) to study the effects of transient
disruption of the ipsilateral M1 on the performance of finger
sequences in right-handed normal subjects. Stimulation of the
M1 ipsilateral to the movement induced timing errors in both
simple and complex sequences performed with either hand, but
with complex sequences, the effects were more pronounced with
the left-sided stimulation. Recent studies in both animals and
humans have confirmed the traditional view that ipsilateral
projections from M1 to the upper limb are mainly directed to
truncal and proximal muscles, with little evidence for direct
connections to distal muscles. The ipsilateral motor pathway
appears to be an important mechanism for functional recovery
after focal brain injury during infancy, but its role in functional
recovery for older children and adults has not yet been clearly
demonstrated. There is increasing evidence from studies using
different methodologies such as rTMS, functional imaging and
movement-related cortical potentials, that M1 is involved in
ipsilateral hand movements, with greater involvement in more
complex tasks and the left hemisphere playing a greater role
than the right.
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Can.
J. Neurol. Sci. 1997; 24: 284-293
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