Affiliation:
1. Department of Neurology, Tokyo Metropolitan Neurological Hospital, Japan.
Abstract
Intracortical efferent zones in the primary motor cortex for thumb movements, namely thumb flexion, extension, adduction, and abduction, have been described in Macaca mulatta monkeys but not in humans. Even recent cortical mapping based on intraoperative monitoring does not provide information about intracortical efferent zones as it is not ethically possible to search the human motor cortex extensively by punctate electrodes.
A 78-year-old man with discrete cortical embolism over the left central sulcus is described. Only a mild weakness of his right thumb was observed. Thumb flexion was affected to a greater degree than thumb extension, adduction, and abduction. The lesion ran along the bottom of the central sulcus and affected part of the precentral and postcentral gyri on both sides of it. Animal studies in Macaca mulatta monkeys have shown that the intracortical efferent zones for thumb movement, especially for thumb flexion, are located in the part of the motor cortex just adjoining the central sulcus that folds down from the "bank" to the depth of the central sulcus. It was possible to explain the prominent weakness of thumb flexion if we applied the results of the animal studies.
Our case suggests that the same arrangement of intracortical efferent zones found in monkeys may also exist in human beings.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)
Reference3 articles.
1. Patterns of localization in precentral and 'supplementary' motor area and their relations to the concept of a premotor area;Woolsey CN;Res PublAssoc Res Nerv Ment Dis.,1952
2. Topographical organization of cortical efferent zones projecting to distal forelimb muscles in the monkey
3. Woolsey CN. Organization of somatic sensory and motor areas of the cerebral cortex. In: Harlow HR Woolsey CN eds. Biological and Biochemical Bases of Behavior. Madison Wis: University of Wisconsin Press; 1958:63-82.
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