Supplementary motor area and other cortical areas in organization of voluntary movements in man
P. E. Roland, B. Larsen, N. A. Lassen and E. Skinhoj 1. Previous studies in man have revealed a coupling between the regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) and the regional cerebral metabolic rate for oxygen. In normal man, increases in the regional cerebral metabolic rate for oxygen leads to proportio...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neurophysiology 1980-01, Vol.43 (1), p.118-136 |
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Zusammenfassung: | P. E. Roland, B. Larsen, N. A. Lassen and E. Skinhoj
1. Previous studies in man have revealed a coupling between the regional
cerebral blood flow (rCBF) and the regional cerebral metabolic rate for
oxygen. In normal man, increases in the regional cerebral metabolic rate
for oxygen leads to proportional increases in the rCBF(34). We have
measured the rCBF as an expression of the level of cortical activity
simultaneously from 254 cortical regions in 28 patients with no major
neurological defects, during rest and during planning and execution of a
few types of learned voluntary movements with the hand. 2. We found that
the rCBF increases exclusively in the supplementary motor area while
subjects were programming a sequence of fast isolated movements of
individual fingers, without actually executing it. 3. During execution of
the same motor sequence, there were equivalent increases of the rCBF in
both supplementary motor areas, but only in the contralateral primary motor
area. In addition, there were more modest rCBF increases in the
contralateral sensory hand area, the convexity part of the premotor area,
and bilaterally in the inferior frontal region. 4. Repetitive fast flexions
of the same finger or a sustained isometric muscular contraction raise the
blood flow in the contralateral primary motor and sensory hand area. 5. A
pure somatosensory discrimination of the shapes of objects, without any
concomitant voluntary movements, also leaves the supplementary motor areas
silent. 6. We conclude that the primary motor area and the part of the
motor system it projects to by itself can control ongoing simple ballistic
movements with the self-same body part. A sequence of different isolated
finger movements requires programming in the supplementary motor areas. We
suggest that the supplementary motor areas are programming areas for motor
subroutines and that these areas form a queue of time-ordered motor
commands before voluntary movement are executed by way of the primary motor
area. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3077 1522-1598 |
DOI: | 10.1152/jn.1980.43.1.118 |