Disruption of Sensorimotor Cortical Oscillations by Visual Interference Predicts the Altered Motor Performance of Persons with Cerebral Palsy

[Display omitted] •Persons with CP underwent MEG during an arrow-based Flanker task.•Reaction time was used to assess motor performance.•Cognitive interference of cortical oscillations moderated the reaction time.•Changes in cortical oscillations reflects top-down control over motor system in CP. Em...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuroscience 2024-01, Vol.536, p.92-103
Hauptverfasser: Busboom, Morgan T., Hoffman, Rashelle M., Spooner, Rachel K., Taylor, Brittany K., Baker, Sarah E., Trevarrow, Michael P., Wilson, Tony W., Kurz, Max J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Persons with CP underwent MEG during an arrow-based Flanker task.•Reaction time was used to assess motor performance.•Cognitive interference of cortical oscillations moderated the reaction time.•Changes in cortical oscillations reflects top-down control over motor system in CP. Emerging evidence indicates that aberrations in sensorimotor cortical oscillations likely play a key role in uncharacteristic motor actions seen in cerebral palsy. This interpretation is largely centered on the assumption that the aberrant cortical oscillations primarily reflect the motor aspects, with less consideration of possible higher-order cognitive connections. To directly probe this view, we examined the impact of cognitive interference on the sensorimotor cortical oscillations seen in persons with cerebral palsy using magnetoencephalography. Persons with cerebral palsy (N = 26, 9–47 years old) and controls (N = 46, 11–49 years) underwent magnetoencephalographic imaging while completing an arrow-based version of the Eriksen flanker task. Structural equation modeling was used to evaluate the relationship between the extent of interference generated by the flanker task and the strength of the sensorimotor cortical oscillations and motor performance. Our results indicated that the impact of cognitive interference on beta and gamma oscillations moderated the interference effect on reaction times in persons with cerebral palsy, above and beyond that seen in controls. Overall, these findings suggest that alterations in sensorimotor oscillatory activity in those with cerebral palsy at least partly reflects top-down control influences on the motor system. Thus, suppression of distracting stimuli should be a consideration when evaluating altered motor actions in cerebral palsy.
ISSN:0306-4522
1873-7544
DOI:10.1016/j.neuroscience.2023.11.017