AI Article Synopsis

  • Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is a non-invasive technique used to assess the neuromotor system, specifically in people with multiple sclerosis (MS), with a focus on a single pulse TMS protocol tested on 110 participants.
  • The study aimed to identify TMS variables that predict clinical outcomes like walking speed, hand dexterity, fatigue, and cognitive processing speed, finding that certain inhibitory and excitatory mechanisms correlate with these outcomes.
  • The results indicate that TMS measurements are more closely related to motor functions than non-motor functions and can serve as useful biomarkers for MS and similar neurological disorders.

Article Abstract

Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is a non-invasive method used to investigate neurophysiological integrity of the human neuromotor system. We describe in detail, the methodology of a single pulse TMS protocol that was performed in a large cohort of people ( = 110) with multiple sclerosis (MS). The aim was to establish and validate a core-set of TMS variables that predicted typical MS clinical outcomes: walking speed, hand dexterity, fatigue, and cognitive processing speed. We provide a brief and simple methodological pipeline to examine excitatory and inhibitory corticospinal mechanisms in MS that map to clinical status. Delayed and longer ipsilateral silent period (a measure of transcallosal inhibition; the influence of one brain hemisphere's activity over the other), longer cortical silent period (suggestive of greater corticospinal inhibition via GABA) and higher resting motor threshold (lower corticospinal excitability) most strongly related to clinical outcomes, especially when measured in the hemisphere corresponding to the weaker hand. Greater interhemispheric asymmetry (imbalance between hemispheres) correlated with poorer performance in the greatest number of clinical outcomes. We also show, not surprisingly, that TMS variables related more strongly to motor outcomes than non-motor outcomes. As it was validated in a large sample of patients with varying severities of central nervous system dysfunction, the protocol described herein can be used by investigators and clinicians alike to investigate the role of TMS as a biomarker in MS and other central nervous system disorders.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8002717PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/brainsci11030384DOI Listing

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