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Brain Res ; 1792: 147999, 2022 10 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35780866

ABSTRACT

Repetitive peripheral magnetic stimulation (rPMS) is noninvasive and painless. It drives plasticity of the primary motor cortex (M1) in children with cerebral palsy (CP) and this improves the ankle function and gait. Our study explored whether rPMS of muscles could influence motricity in an adult CP case. A 30-year-old woman with mixed CP participated in four sessions (S1 to S4, one per week) where rPMS was applied bilaterally on leg and trunk muscles (tibialis anterior-TA, hamstrings, transverse abdominis, paraspinal multifidus). Clinical scores and M1 excitability (probed by transcranial magnetic stimulation) were tested at pre-rPMS at S1 (baseline) and S4, then 40 days later (follow-up). The active ankle dorsiflexion was significantly increased and the plantar flexors resistance to stretch reduced as compared to baseline. The improvement of the ankle function was carried-over to the quality of locomotor patterns. Changes persisted until follow-up and were paralleled by drastic changes of M1 excitability. These original findings of rPMS influence on M1 plasticity and motricity are promising for the functional improvement of adult people living with CP and should be replicated in larger-sampled studies.


Subject(s)
Ankle , Cerebral Palsy , Adult , Ankle Joint , Cerebral Palsy/therapy , Child , Female , Gait/physiology , Humans , Magnetic Phenomena
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