Cerebral and Cerebellar Activation in Power and Precision Grip Movements: An H215O Positron Emission Tomography Study

Author:

Takasawa Masashi12,Oku Naohiko1,Osaki Yasuhiro1,Kinoshita Hiroshi3,Imaizumi Masao1,Yoshikawa Takuya12,Kimura Yasuyuki12,Kajimoto Katsufumi12,Sasagaki Michihiro4,Kitagawa Kazuo2,Hori Masatsugu2,Hatazawa Jun1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nuclear Medicine and Tracer Kinetics, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, Osaka University, Osaka, Japan

2. Department of Internal Medicine and Therapeutics, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, Osaka University, Osaka, Japan

3. School of Health and Sports Sciences, Osaka University, Osaka, Japan

4. Department of Nuclear Medicine, Osaka University Hospital, Osaka, Japan.

Abstract

Most human manual grip movements can be divided into power gripping and precision gripping, but central neural control during these tasks remains unclear. We investigated activation of the whole brain to analyze how simple hand movements are performed. The cerebral blood flow of seven healthy right-handed volunteers was measured by H215O positron emission tomography during right grip tasks without gripping a target object. Auditory-cued, repetitive power grips (i.e., fist making) and repetitive precision grips (i.e., opposition of the tip of the index finger and the tip of the thumb) were performed at 1.26 Hz. The areas activated during both tasks were the left primary sensorimotor cortex, caudal portion of the dorsal premotor, caudal portion of the supplementary motor area, cingulate motor area, and the right spinocerebellum and intermediate region of the cerebrocerebellum in comparison with the rest state. The analysis of power grip-precision grip tasks showed the activated peaks in the upper portion of the left sensorimotor area and right cerebellar vermis, but these areas were activated in both the tasks [(power grip-rest) and (precision grip-rest)] with uncorrected P < 0.001 as the statistical criterion. With P < 0.05 corrected as the statistical criterion, the results showed no significant activated peaks in regional cerebral blood flow. Our findings indicate no difference in brain activation between the acts of power grip and precision grip without a target object.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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