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Using fMRI to Understand the Roles of Brain Areas for Fine Hand Movements - Article


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Clinical Trial: Using fMRI to Understand the Roles of Brain Areas for Fine Hand Movements

This study is currently recruiting patients.

Sponsored by: National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Information provided by: Warren G Magnuson Clinical Center (CC)

Purpose

Ideomotor apraxia, a disorder that affects patients with stroke and a variety of other brain lesions, features disturbed timing, sequence, and spatial organization of skilled movements. This study will look at how different areas of the human brain control fine hand movements.

Thirty-five participants 21 years and older will be enrolled in this study-25 healthy, right-handed people, and 10 stroke patients. They will undergo two outpatient sessions, each lasting up to 3 hours. The first visit for the stroke patients will occur between 2 weeks and 3 months after the stroke; the second visit will be at least 6 months after the stroke.

Participants will have a physical exam, give a medical history, and complete a questionnaire. Then they will undergo magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans. They will lie in the MRI scanner and will be asked to do a number of skilled hand movements using the right hand (such as pretending to use a hammer or waving goodbye) in response to directions that will appear on a screen mounted over their head. Their movements will be recorded on videotape during the procedures.

Condition
Ideomotor Apraxia

MedlinePlus related topics:  Neurologic Diseases

Study Type: Observational
Study Design: Natural History

Official Title: Event-Related fMRI Analysis of Patients with Ideomotor Apraxia During Transitive and Intransitive Hand Gesturing

Further Study Details: 

Expected Total Enrollment:  35

Study start: June 16, 2003

The present study focuses on the evaluation of neural activation patterns underlying praxis movements in normal controls and in patients with ideomotor apraxia using event-related functional MRI (fMRI). Ideomotor apraxia is a disorder affecting patients with stroke and a variety of other brain lesions. The disorder involves disturbed timing, sequence, and spatial organization of skilled movements, during execution and probably also preparatory phases. As a consequence, patients suffer from incorrect temporal and spatial components to movements as evidenced during pantomime of transitive (object/tool related) and intransitive (independent of object/tool use) gestures. Thus far, damage to posterior parietal regions and parietofrontal circuits has been implicated in significantly contributing to this disorder. However, little is known about the mechanism of cortical reorganization following damage, notably during the recovery process. We hypothesize that recruitment of parallel and contralateral motor pathways compensate for reduced communication within parietofrontal circuits which prevents accurate motor performance.

We will analyze fMRI activation on transitive and intransitive gestures in 10 patients with ideomotor apraxia during subacute and chronic stages compared to 25 normal controls. The design of the behavioral paradigm incorporates a distinct period of planning prior to each movement, which also allows evaluation of differences in the planning and execution phase between patients and controls. Further analysis will look at patterns of functional connectivity between activated brain areas, notably their altered interactions in ideomotor apraxia. Of special interest is the putative engagement of perilesional or even remote brain areas in a neuronal network during attempted recovery from motor deficit.

It is expected from the study that a better understanding of cortical plasticity compensating for motor deficits in ideomotor apraxia can be therapeutically exploited, notably in the rehabilitation process.

Eligibility

Genders Eligible for Study:  Both

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Criteria

INCLUSION CRITERIA:
Normal volunteers will be recruited from people who are registered as HMCS normal volunteers.
Patients diagnosed with ideomotor apraxia with a single left hemisphere stroke will be included.
Lesions may be located in any part of the frontal and parietal areas or both, as well as their connections.
All subjects and patients participating in this study will have a valid Clinical Center Medical Record Number.
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
Subjects with abnormal neurologic examinations, previous or current neurological and psychiatric disorders will be excluded.
Subjects under age 21, pregnant or mentally impaired will be excluded.
Ideomotor apraxic patients with a second neurologic disorder including more than one brain lesion of the inability to cooperate fully will be excluded.
Patients with a history of significant medical disorders such as cancers will be excluded.
MRI experiments will not be performed with subjects or patients who have pacemakers, brain stimulators, dental implants or metallic braces, aneurysm clips (metal clips on the wall of a large artery), metallic prostheses (including metal pins and rods, heart valves, and cochlear implants), permanent eyeliner, insulin pumps, or shrapnel fragments.
Welders and metal workers are also at risk for injury because of possible small metal fragments in the eye of which they may be unaware. Subjects will be screened for these contraindications prior to the study.

Location and Contact Information


Maryland
      National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), 9000 Rockville Pike,  Bethesda,  Maryland,  20892,  United States; Recruiting
Patient Recruitment and Public Liaison Office  1-800-411-1222    prpl@mail.cc.nih.gov 
TTY  1-866-411-1010 

More Information

Detailed Web Page

Publications

Buhmann C, Glauche V, Sturenburg HJ, Oechsner M, Weiller C, Buchel C. Pharmacologically modulated fMRI--cortical responsiveness to levodopa in drug-naive hemiparkinsonian patients. Brain. 2003 Feb;126(Pt 2):451-61.

Choi SH, Na DL, Kang E, Lee KM, Lee SW, Na DG. Functional magnetic resonance imaging during pantomiming tool-use gestures. Exp Brain Res. 2001 Aug;139(3):311-7.

Haaland KY, Harrington DL, Knight RT. Neural representations of skilled movement. Brain. 2000 Nov;123 ( Pt 11):2306-13.

Study ID Numbers:  030230; 03-N-0230
Record last reviewed:  June 9, 2004
Last Updated:  November 23, 2004
Record first received:  June 19, 2003
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:  NCT00063115
Health Authority: United States: Federal Government
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on 2005-04-08


Source: ClinicalTrials.gov
Cache Date: April 9, 2005

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Page Updated: November 5, 2004
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