Motor Cortical Network Flexibility is Associated With Biomechanical Walking Impairment in Chronic Stroke

Author:

Palmer Jacqueline A.1ORCID,Kesar Trisha M.1,Wolf Steven L.12ORCID,Borich Michael R.1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Physical Therapy, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA

2. Atlanta VA Visual and Neurocognitive Center of Excellence, Decatur, GA, USA

Abstract

Background: The inability to flexibly modulate motor behavior with changes in task demand or environmental context is a pervasive feature of motor impairment and dysfunctional mobility after stroke. Objective: The purpose of this study was to test the reactive and modulatory capacity of lower-limb primary motor cortical (M1) networks using electroencephalography (EEG) measures of cortical activity evoked by transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and to evaluate their associations with clinical and biomechanical measures of walking function in chronic stroke. Methods: TMS assessments of motor cortex excitability were performed during rest and active ipsilateral plantarflexion in chronic stroke and age-matched controls. TMS-evoked motor cortical network interactions were quantified with simultaneous EEG as the post-TMS (0–300 ms) beta (15–30 Hz) coherence between electrodes overlying M1 bilaterally. We compared TMS-evoked coherence between groups during rest and active conditions and tested associations with poststroke motor impairment, paretic propulsive gait deficits, and the presence of paretic leg motor evoked potentials (MEPs). Results: Stroke ( n = 14, 66 ± 9 years, F = 4) showed lower TMS-evoked cortical coherence and activity-dependent modulation compared to controls ( n = 9, 68 ± 6 years, F = 3). Blunted reactivity and atypical modulation of TMS-evoked coherence were associated with lower paretic ankle moments for propulsive force generation during walking and absent paretic MEPs. Conclusions: Impaired flexibility of motor cortical networks to react to TMS and modulate during motor activity is distinctly associated with paretic limb biomechanical walking impairment, and may provide useful insight into the neuromechanistic underpinnings of chronic post-stroke mobility deficits.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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