• 沒有找到結果。

1. Daly DD, Pedley TA (eds): Current practice of clinical EEG. 2nd ed. New York,

Raven Press, 1990.

2. Kornhuber HH, Deecke L. Changes in the brain potential in voluntary

movements and passive movements in man: readiness potential and reafferent

potentials. Pflügers Arch Gesamte Physiol Menschen Tiere. 1965; 284:1–17.

3. Shibasaki H, Barrett G, Halliday E, Halliday AM. Components of the

movement-related cortical potential and their scalp topography.

Electroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol. 1980; 49:213–226.

4. Deecke L, Scheid P, Kornhuber HH. Distribution of readiness potential,

pre-motion positivity, and motor potential of the human cerebral cortex

preceding voluntary finger movements. Exp Brain Res. 1969; 7:158 –168.

5. Ikeda A, Lüders HO, Shibasaki H, Collura TF, Burgess RC, Morris HH,

Hamano T. Movement-related potentials associated with bilateral simultaneous

and unilateral movements recorded from human supplementary motor area.

Electroenceph Clin Neurophysiol 1995; 95:323–34.

6. Gerloff C. Movement-related cortical potentials in patients with focal brain

lesions. In: Jahanshahi M, Hallett M, eds. The Bereitschaftspotential.

Movement-Related Cortical Potentials. New York, NY: Kluwer

Academic/Plenum Publishers; 2003.

7. McNabb AW, Carroll WM, Mastaglia FL. "Alien hand" and loss of bimanual

coordination after dominant anterior cerebral artery territory infarction. J Neurol

Neurosurg Psychiatry. 1988;51(2):218-22.

8. Wiese H, Stude P, Nebel K, Osenberg D, Volzke V, Ischebeck W, Stolke D,

Diener HC, Keidel M. Impaired movement-related potentials in acute frontal

traumatic brain injury. Clin Neurophysiol. 2004;115:289–98.

9. Wiese H, Stude P, Nebel K, Osenberg D, Ischebeck W, Stolke D, Diener HC,

Keidel M. Recovery of movement-related potentials in the temporal course after

prefrontal traumatic brain injury: a follow-up study. Clin Neurophysiol. 2004;

115:2677–92.

10. Singh J, Knight RT. Frontal lobe contribution to voluntary movements in

humans. Brain Res 1990;531:45–54.

11. Shibasaki H. Movement-associated cortical potentials in unilateral cerebral

lesions. J Neurol. 1975;209:189 –198.

12. Kitamura J, Shibasaki H, Takeuchi T. Cortical potentials preceding voluntary

elbow movement in recovered hemiparesis. Electroencephalogr Clin

Neurophysiol. 1996;98:149 –156.

13. Honda M, Nagamine T, Fukuyama H, Yonekura Y, Kimura J, Shibasaki H.

Movement-related cortical potentials and regional cerebral blood flow change in

patients with stroke after motor recovery. J Neurol Sci. 1997; 146:117–126.

14. Deecke L, Lang W, Heller HJ, Hufnagl M, Kornhuber HH.

Bereitschaftspotential in patients with unilateral lesions of the supplementary

motor area. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 1987; 50:1430–4.

15. Jahanshahi M, Jenkins IH, Brown RG, Marsden CD, Passingham RE, Brooks

DJ. Self-initiated versus externally triggered movements. I. An investigation

using measurement of regional cerebral blood flow with PET and

movement-related potentials in normal and Parkinson’s disease subject. Brain

1995; 118:913–33.

16. Cunnington R, Iansek R, Bradshaw JL, Phillips JG. Movement-related

potentials in Parkinson’s disease. Presence and predictability of temporal and

spatial cues. Brain 1995; 118:935–50.

17. Witte OW. Lesion-induced plasticity as a potential mechanism for recovery and

rehabilitative training. Curr Opin Neurol 1998; 11:655–62.

18. Bates JF, Goldman-Rakic PS. Prefrontal connections of medial motor areas in

the rhesus monkey. J Comp Neurol 1993;336:211–28.

19. Luppino G, Matelli M, Camarda R, Rizzolatti G. Corticocortical connections of

Area F3 (SMA-proper) and Area F6 (pre-SMA) in the macaque monkey. J

Comp Neurol 1993 ;338:114–40.

20. Kolb B, Milner B. Performance of complex arm and facial movements after

focal brain lesions. Neuropsychologia 1981;19:491–503.

21. Alexander GE, Crutcher MD. Parallel organization of functionally segregated

circuits linking basal ganglia and cortex. Ann Rev Neurosci. 1986; 9: 357-81.

22. Cummings JL. Frontal-subcortical circuits and human behavior. Arch Neurol.

1993; 50:873-80.

23. Lang W. Surface recordings of the Bereitschaftspotential in normals. In:

Jahanshahi M, Hallett M, eds. The Bereitschaftspotential: Movement-Related

Cortical Potentials. New York, NY: Kluwer Academics/Plenum Publishers;

2003:19 –34.

24. Toma K, Hallett M. Generators of the movement-related cortical potentials and

dipole source analysis. In: Jahanshahi M, Hallett M, eds. The

Bereitschaftspotential: Movement-Related Cortical Potentials. New York, NY:

Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers; 2003:113–30.

25. Wiese H, Stude P, Sarge R, Nebel K, Diener HC, Keidel M. Reorganization of

motor execution rather than preparation in poststroke hemiparesis. Stroke. 2005;

36:1474-9.

26. Ikeda A, Yazawa S, Kunieda T, et al. Cognitive motor control in human

pre-supplementary motor area studied by subdural recording of

discrimination/selection-related potentials. Brain 1999;122:915–31.

27. Liepert J, Bauder H, Miltner WH, Taub E, Weiller, C. Treatment- induced

cortical reorganization after stroke in humans. Stroke 2000; 31: 1210– 6.

28. Nelles G, Jentzen W, Jueptner M, Muller S, Diener HC. Arm training induced

brain plasticity in stroke studied with serial positron emission tomography.

NeuroImage 2001; 13: 1146–54.

29. Weiller C, Ramsay SC, Wise RSJ, Friston KJ, Frackowiak RSJ. Individual

patterns of functional reorganization in the human cerebral cortex after capsular

infarction. Ann Neurol 1993; 33:181–9.

30. Cramer SC, Nelles G, Benson RR, Kaplan JD, Parker RA, Kwong KK,

Kennedy DN, Finklestein SP, Rosen BR. A functional MRI study of subjects

recovered from hemiparetic stroke. Stroke. 1997; 28:2518 –27.

31. Cao Y, D’Olhaberriague L, Vikingstad EM, Levine SR, Welch KMA. Pilot

study of functional MRI to assess cerebral activation of motor function after

poststroke hemiparesis. Stroke 1998; 29:112–22.

32. Feydy A, Carlier R, Roby-Brami A, Bussel B, Cazalis F, Pierot L, Burnod Y,

Maier MA. Longitudinal study of motor recovery after stroke: recruitment and

focusing of brain activation. Stroke. 2002; 33:1610 –17.

33. Caramia MD, Iani C, Bernardi G. Cerebral plasticity after stroke as revealed by

ipsilateral responses to magnetic stimulation. Neuroreport 1996;7:1756–60

34. Netz J, Lammers T, Hömberg V. Reorganization of motor output in the

non-affected hemisphere after stroke. Brain 1997;120:1579–86

35. Caramia MD, Palmieri MG, Giacomini P, Iani C, Dally L, Silvestrini M.

Ipsilateral activation of the unaffected motor cortex in patients with hemiparetic

stroke. Clin Neurophysiol 2000;111:1990–6

36. Weiller C, Chollet F, Fristion KJ, Wise RSJ, Frackowiak RSJ. Functional

reorganization of the brain in recovery from striatocapsular infarction in man.

Ann Neurol 1992;31:463–72

37. Chollet F, DiPiero V, Wise RJS, Brooks DJ, Dolan RJ, Frackowiak RSJ. The

functional anatomy of motor recovery after stroke in humans: a study with

positron emission tomography. Ann Neurol 1991;29:63–71

38. Seitz RJ, Ho¨flich P, Binkofski F, Tellmann L, Herzog H, Freund HJ. Role of

the premotor cortex in recovery from middle cerebral artery infarction. Arch

Neurol 1998;55:1081–8

39. Green JB, Bialy Y, Sora E, Ricamato A. High-resolution EEG in poststroke

hemiparesis can identify generators during motor tasks. Stroke 1999; 30:

2659–65.

40. Ikeda A, Shibasaki H. Generator mechanisms of the Bereitschaftspotential as

studied by epicortical recording in patients with intractable partial epilepsy. In:

Jahanshahi M, Hallett M, eds. The Bereitschaftspotential: Movement-Related

Cortical Potentials. New York, NY: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers;

2003:45–59.

41. Noachtar S, Lüders HO. Focal akinetic seizures as documented by

electroencephalography and video recordings. Neurology. 1999;53(2):427-9.

42. Satow T, Ikeda A, Yamamoto J, Takayama M, Matsuhashi M, Ohara S,

Matsumoto R, Begum T, Fukuyama H, Hashimoto N, Shibasaki H. Partial

epilepsy manifesting atonic seizure: report of two cases. Epilepsia.

2002;43(11):1425-31.

43. Lüders HO, Dinner DS, Morris HH, Wyllie E, Comair YG. Cortical electrical

stimulation in humans: the negative motor areas. Adv Neurol 1995; 67: 115–29.

44. Jürgens U. The efferent and afferent connections of the supplementary motor

area. Brain Res 1984;300:63–81

45. Lu MT, Preston JB, Strick PL. Interconnection between the prefrontal cortex

and the premotor areas in the frontal lobe. J Comp Neurol 1994; 341:375–92.

46. Rizzolatti G, Luppino G, Matelli M. The organization of the cortical motor

system: new concepts. Electroenceph clin Neurophysiol 1998;106:283–96.

47. Neshige R, Lüders H, Shibasaki H. Recording of movement-related potentials

from scalp and cortex in man. Brain 1988;111:719–36.

48. Praamstra P, Stegeman DF, Horstink MWIM, Cools AR. Dipole source analysis

suggests selective modulation of the supplementary motor area contribution to

the readiness potential. Electroenceph clin Neurophysiol 1996;98:468–77.

49. Barbas H, Pandya DN. Architecture and frontal cortical connections of the

premotor cortex (area 6) in the rhesus monkey. J Comp Neurol 1987;

256:211–28.

50. Knösche T, Praamstra P, Stegemann D, Peters M. Linear estimation

discriminates midline sources and a motor cortex contribution to the readiness

potential. Electroenceph clin Neurophysiol 1996;99: 183–90.

51. Cui RQ, Huter D, Lang W, Deecke L. Neuroimage of voluntary movement:

topography of the Bereitsschaftspotential, a 64-channel DC current source

density study. Neuroimage 1999; 9:124–34.

52. Lee KM, Chang KH, Roh JK. Subregions within the supplementary motor area

activated at different stages of movement preparation and execution.

Neuroimage 1999;9:117–23.

53. Cunnington R, Windischberger C, Deecke L, Moser E. The preparation and

execution of self-initiated and externally-triggered movement: a study of

event-related fMRI. Neuroimage 2002; 15:373–85.

54. Keidel M. Motor intention potential. Electrophysiologic objectization of a single

intended movement. Naturwissenschaften. 1983; 70:180–5.

相關文件