Connectivity defines the distinctive anatomy and function of the hand-knob area

Author:

Beyh Ahmad12ORCID,Howells Henrietta1ORCID,Giampiccolo Davide345ORCID,Cancemi Daniele1,De Santiago Requejo Francisco1,Citro Salvatore6ORCID,Keeble Hannah1,Lavrador José Pedro7,Bhangoo Ranjeev7,Ashkan Keyoumars7ORCID,Dell’Acqua Flavio1,Catani Marco6,Vergani Francesco7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. NatBrainLab, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King’s College London , London SE5 8AF , UK

2. Department of Psychiatry, Brain Health Institute, Rutgers University , Piscataway, NJ 08854 , USA

3. Department of Clinical and Experimental Epilepsy, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, University College London , London WC1N 3BG , UK

4. Victor Horsley Department of Neurosurgery, National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery , London WC1N 3BG , UK

5. Department of Neurosurgery, Institute of Neurosciences, Cleveland Clinic London , London SW1X 7HY , UK

6. IRCCS, SYNLAB, SDN , Naples 80121 , Italy

7. Neurosurgical Department, King’s College Hospital , London SE5 9RS , UK

Abstract

Abstract Control of the hand muscles during fine digit movements requires a high level of sensorimotor integration, which relies on a complex network of cortical and subcortical hubs. The components of this network have been extensively studied in human and non-human primates, but discrepancies in the findings obtained from different mapping approaches are difficult to interpret. In this study, we defined the cortical and connectional components of the hand motor network in the same cohort of 20 healthy adults and 3 neurosurgical patients. We used multimodal structural magnetic resonance imaging (including T1-weighted imaging and diffusion tractography), as well as functional magnetic resonance imaging and navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation (nTMS). The motor map obtained from nTMS compared favourably with the one obtained from functional magnetic resonance imaging, both of which overlapped well within the ‘hand-knob’ region of the precentral gyrus and in an adjacent region of the postcentral gyrus. nTMS stimulation of the precentral and postcentral gyri led to motor-evoked potentials in the hand muscles in all participants, with more responses recorded from precentral stimulations. We also observed that precentral stimulations tended to produce motor-evoked potentials with shorter latencies and higher amplitudes than postcentral stimulations. Tractography showed that the region of maximum overlap between terminations of precentral–postcentral U-shaped association fibres and somatosensory projection tracts colocalizes with the functional motor maps. The relationships between the functional maps, and between them and the tract terminations, were replicated in the patient cohort. Three main conclusions can be drawn from our study. First, the hand-knob region is a reliable anatomical landmark for the functional localization of fine digit movements. Second, its distinctive shape is determined by the convergence of highly myelinated long projection fibres and short U-fibres. Third, the unique role of the hand-knob area is explained by its direct action on the spinal motoneurons and the access to high-order somatosensory information for the online control of fine movements. This network is more developed in the hand region compared to other body parts of the homunculus motor strip, and it may represent an important target for enhancing motor learning during early development.

Funder

National Institute for Health and Care Research

Wellcome Trust King’s Clinical Research Facility

NIHR Maudsley Biomedical Research Centre at South London

Maudsley National Health Service Foundation Trust

King’s College London

Ministry of University and Research

National Recovery and Resilience Plan

MNESYS

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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