Structure-function abnormalities in cortical sensory projections in embouchure dystonia
2020
Abstract Background Embouchure dystonia (ED) is a task-specific focal dystonia in professional brass players leading to abnormal orofacial muscle posturing/spasms during performance. Previous studies have outlined abnormal cortical sensorimotor function during sensory/motor tasks and in the resting state as well as abnormal cortical sensorimotor structure. Yet, potentially underlying white-matter tract abnormalities in this network disease are unknown. Objective To delineate structure-function abnormalities within cerebral sensorimotor trajectories in ED. Method Probabilistic tractography and seed-based functional connectivity analysis were performed in 16/16 ED patients/healthy brass players within a simple literature-informed network model of cortical sensorimotor processing encompassing supplementary motor, superior parietal, primary somatosensory and motor cortex as well as the putamen. Post-hoc grey matter volumetry was performed within cortices of abnormal trajectories. Results ED patients showed average axial diffusivity reduction within projections between the primary somatosensory cortex and putamen, with converse increases within projections between supplementary motor and superior parietal cortex in both hemispheres. Increase in the mode of anisotropy in patients was accompanying the latter left-hemispheric projection, as well as in the supplementary motor area’s projection to the left primary motor cortex. Patient’s left primary somatosensory functional connectivity with the putamen was abnormally reduced and significantly associated with the axial diffusivity reduction. Left primary somatosensory grey matter volume was increased in patients. Conclusion Correlates of abnormal tract integrity within primary somatosensory cortico-subcortical projections and higher-order sensorimotor projections support the key role of dysfunctional sensory information propagation in ED pathophysiology. Differential directionality of cortico-cortical and cortico-subcortical abnormalities hints at non-uniform sensory system changes.
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