The ipsilateral cerebellar hemisphere is overactive during hand movements in akinetic parkinsonian patients

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Abstract

We compared the rCBF changes induced by the execution of a finger-to-thumb opposition motor task in the cerebellar hemispheres of 12 normal subjects, 12 parkinsonian patients whose medication had been withheld for at least 18 h and 16 parkinsonian patients on medication using single photon emission tomography and i.v. 133Xe. The normal subjects and parkinsonian patients on medication exhibited the same pattern of response, with a significant increase in rCBF in the contralateral primary motor cortex and in the supplementary motor areas. No significant rCBF change was detected in the cerebellum of these two groups; this finding was expected since our technique cannot detect cerebellar activation when the motor task is executed at a relatively low rate and small amplitude as it was in this study. The parkinsonian patients off medication exhibited a markedly different pattern of activation characterized by a significant overactivation in the ipsilateral cerebellar hemisphere and a significant underactivation in the supplementary motor areas. These results suggest that parkinsonian patients off medication may try so compensate for their basal ganglia-cortical loop's dysfunction using other motor pathways involving cerebellar relays.

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Rascol, O., Sabatini, U., Fabre, N., Brefel, C., Loubinoux, I., Celsis, P., … Chollet, F. (1997). The ipsilateral cerebellar hemisphere is overactive during hand movements in akinetic parkinsonian patients. Brain, 120(1), 103–110. https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/120.1.103

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