• Brain research · Jul 1999

    Hand preference and transcranial magnetic stimulation asymmetry of cortical motor representation.

    • W J Triggs, B Subramanium, and F Rossi.
    • Human Motor Physiology Laboratory and the Department of Neurology, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, 32610-0236, USA. triggs.wj@medmac.ufl.edu
    • Brain Res. 1999 Jul 24;835(2):324-9.

    AbstractHuman handedness may be associated with asymmetry in the corticospinal motor system. Previous studies measuring the threshold for eliciting motor evoked potentials (MEPs) to transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) have provided evidence consistent with this hypothesis. However, TMS asymmetry observed in previous studies may have reflected cortical or spinal differences. We therefore undertook this investigation to test the hypothesis that handedness is associated with asymmetry in cortical motor representations. We used TMS to map contralateral cortical motor representations of the right and left abductor pollicis brevis (APB) and flexor carpi radialis (FCR) muscles in nine normal subjects (three left-handed). Using focal stimulation with a figure-of-8 shaped magnetic coil, we found no differences in MEP threshold or MEP size between the preferred and the nonpreferred hand. However, we observed that the number of scalp stimulation sites eliciting MEPs was statistically greater for APB and FCR muscles of the preferred limb. We found significant asymmetry between right-handed and left-handed subjects, such that in right-handers, the representation of the right APB was larger than that of the left APB, but in left-handers the representation of right APB was smaller than that of the left APB. These results suggest that handedness is associated with asymmetry in cortical motor representation.Copyright 1999 Elsevier Science B. V.

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