An acute session of motor imagery training induces use-dependent plasticity.

Fiche publication


Date publication

décembre 2019

Journal

Scientific reports

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Pr PAPAXANTHIS Charalambos


Tous les auteurs :
Ruffino C, Gaveau J, Papaxanthis C, Lebon F

Résumé

Motor imagery, defined as the mental representation of an action without movement-related sensory inputs, is a well-known intervention to improve motor performance. In the current study, we tested whether use-dependent plasticity, a mechanism underlying motor learning, could be induced by an acute session of motor imagery. By means of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) over the left primary motor cortex, we evoked isolated thumb movements in the right hand and assessed corticospinal excitability in the flexor and extensor pollicis brevis muscles. We measured the mean TMS-induced movement direction before and after an acute session of motor imagery practice. In a first experiment, participants of the imagery group were instructed to repeatedly imagine their thumb moving in a direction deviated by 90° from the pre-test movement. This group, but not the control group, deviated the post-training TMS-induced movements toward the training target direction (+44° ± 62° and -1° ± 23°, respectively). Interestingly, the deviation magnitude was driven by the corticospinal excitability increase in the agonist muscle. In a second experiment, we found that post-training TMS-induced movements were proportionally deviated toward the trained direction and returned to baseline 30 minutes after the motor imagery training. These findings suggest that motor imagery induces use-dependent plasticity and, this neural process is accompanied by corticospinal excitability increase in the agonist muscle.

Mots clés

Adult, Evoked Potentials, Motor, physiology, Female, Humans, Imagery, Psychotherapy, Male, Muscle, Skeletal, physiology, Neuronal Plasticity, Psychomotor Performance, physiology, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation, Young Adult

Référence

Sci Rep. 2019 12 27;9(1):20002