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Cortical neurophysiology of primary isolated dystonia and non‐dystonic adults: A meta‐analysis
Author(s) -
McCambridge Alana B.,
Bradnam Lynley V.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
european journal of neuroscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.346
H-Index - 206
eISSN - 1460-9568
pISSN - 0953-816X
DOI - 10.1111/ejn.14987
Subject(s) - dystonia , transcranial magnetic stimulation , silent period , focal dystonia , motor cortex , neuroscience , cervical dystonia , primary motor cortex , psychology , blepharospasm , physical medicine and rehabilitation , neurophysiology , disinhibition , meta analysis , medicine , stimulation
Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is a non‐invasive method to assess neurophysiology of the primary motor cortex in humans. Dystonia is a poorly understood neurological movement disorder, often presenting in an idiopathic, isolated form across different parts of the body. The neurophysiological profile of isolated dystonia compared to healthy adults remains unclear. We conducted a systematic review with meta‐analysis of neurophysiologic TMS measures in people with isolated dystonia to provide a synthesized understanding of cortical neurophysiology associated with isolated dystonia. We performed a systematic database search and data were extracted independently by the two authors. Separate meta‐analyses were performed for TMS measures of: motor threshold, corticomotor excitability, short interval intracortical inhibition, cortical silent period, intracortical facilitation and afferent‐induced inhibition. Standardized mean differences were calculated using a random effects model to determine overall effect sizes and confidence intervals. Heterogeneity was explored using dystonia type subgroup analysis. The search resulted in 78 studies meeting inclusion criteria, of these 57 studies reported data in participants with focal hand dystonia, cervical dystonia, blepharospasm or spasmodic dysphonia, and were included in at least one meta‐analysis. The cortical silent period, short‐interval intracortical inhibition and afferent‐induced inhibition was found to be reduced in isolated dystonia compared to controls. Reduced GABAergic‐mediated inhibition in the primary motor cortex in idiopathic isolated dystonia's suggest interventions targeted to aberrant cortical disinhibition could provide a novel treatment. Future meta‐analyses require neurophysiology studies to use homogeneous cohorts of isolated dystonia participants, publish raw data values, and record electromyographic responses from dystonic musculature where possible.

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