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Task‐specificity in focal dystonia is shaped by aberrant diversity of a functional network kernel
Author(s) -
Fuertinger Stefan,
Simonyan Kristina
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
movement disorders
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.352
H-Index - 198
eISSN - 1531-8257
pISSN - 0885-3185
DOI - 10.1002/mds.97
Subject(s) - dystonia , focal dystonia , neuroscience , spasmodic dysphonia , psychology , motor control , botulinum toxin , physical medicine and rehabilitation , medicine
Objectives Task‐specific focal dystonia selectively affects the motor control during skilled and highly learned behaviors. Recent data suggest the role of neural network abnormalities in the development of the pathophysiological dystonic cascade. Methods We used resting‐state functional MRI and analytic techniques rooted in network science and graph theory to examine the formation of abnormal subnetwork of highly influential brain regions, the functional network kernel, and its influence on aberrant dystonic connectivity specific to affected body region and skilled motor behavior. Results We found abnormal embedding of sensorimotor cortex and prefrontal thalamus in dystonic network kernel as a hallmark of task‐specific focal dystonia. Dependent on the affected body region, aberrant functional specialization of the network kernel included regions of motor control management in focal hand dystonia (writer's cramp, musician's focal hand dystonia) and sensorimotor processing in laryngeal dystonia (spasmodic dysphonia, singer's laryngeal dystonia). Dependent on skilled motor behavior, the network kernel featured altered connectivity between sensory and motor execution circuits in musician's dystonia (musician's focal hand dystonia, singer's laryngeal dystonia) and abnormal integration of sensory feedback into motor planning and executive circuits in non‐musician's dystonia (writer's cramp, spasmodic dysphonia). Conclusions Our study identified specific traits in disorganization of large‐scale neural connectivity that underlie the common pathophysiology of task‐specific focal dystonia while reflecting distinct symptomatology of its different forms. Identification of specialized regions of information transfer that influence dystonic network activity is an important step for future delineation of targets for neuromodulation as a potential therapeutic option of task‐specific focal dystonia. © 2018 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society

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