Cerebellum Tunes the Excitability of the Motor System: Evidence from Peripheral Motor Axons

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Abstract

Cerebellum is highly connected with the contralateral cerebral cortex. So far, the motor deficits observed in acute focal cerebellar lesions in human have been mainly explained on the basis of a disruption of the cerebello-thalamo-cortical projections. Cerebellar circuits have also numerous anatomical and functional interactions with brainstem nuclei and projects also directly to the spinal cord. Cerebellar lesions alter the excitability of peripheral motor axons as demonstrated by peripheral motor threshold-tracking techniques in cerebellar stroke. The biophysical changes are correlated with the functional scores. Nerve excitability measurements represent an attractive tool to extract the rules underlying the tuning of excitability of the motor pathways by the cerebellum and to discover the contributions of each cerebellar nucleus in this key function, contributing to early plasticity and sensorimotor learning.

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Nodera, H., & Manto, M. (2014, November 18). Cerebellum Tunes the Excitability of the Motor System: Evidence from Peripheral Motor Axons. Cerebellum. Springer Science and Business Media, LLC. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12311-014-0578-z

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