A Reliability Study on Brain Activation During Active and Passive Arm Movements Supported by an MRI-Compatible Robot


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Date

2014-11

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

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Data

Abstract

In neurorehabilitation, longitudinal assessment of arm movement related brain function in patients with motor disability is challenging due to variability in task performance. MRI-compatible robots monitor and control task performance, yielding more reliable evaluation of brain function over time. The main goals of the present study were first to define the brain network activated while performing active and passive elbow movements with an MRI-compatible arm robot (MaRIA) in healthy subjects, and second to test the reproducibility of this activation over time. For the fMRI analysis two models were compared. In model 1 movement onset and duration were included, whereas in model 2 force and range of motion were added to the analysis. Reliability of brain activation was tested with several statistical approaches applied on individual and group activation maps and on summary statistics. The activated network included mainly the primary motor cortex, primary and secondary somatosensory cortex, superior and inferior parietal cortex, medial and lateral premotor regions, and subcortical structures. Reliability analyses revealed robust activation for active movements with both fMRI models and all the statistical methods used. Imposed passive movements also elicited mainly robust brain activation for individual and group activation maps, and reliability was improved by including additional force and range of motion using model 2. These findings demonstrate that the use of robotic devices, such as MaRIA, can be useful to reliably assess arm movement related brain activation in longitudinal studies and may contribute in studies evaluating therapies and brain plasticity following injury in the nervous system.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

27 (6)

Pages / Article No.

731 - 746

Publisher

Springer

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Elbow flexion/extension; fMRI; MRI-Compatible robotic devices; Neurorehabilitation; Reliability; Sensorimotor network

Organisational unit

03628 - Prüssmann, Klaas P. / Prüssmann, Klaas P. check_circle
03454 - Martin, Kevan A.C. (emeritus) check_circle
03654 - Riener, Robert / Riener, Robert check_circle

Notes

It was possible to publish this article open access thanks to a Swiss National Licence with the publisher.

Funding

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