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  • Functional neuroimaging of ...
    Dogonowski, Anne-Marie; Andersen, Kasper W.; Sellebjerg, Finn; Schreiber, Karen; Madsen, Kristoffer H.; Siebner, Hartwig R.

    NeuroImage (Orlando, Fla.), 04/2019, Letnik: 190
    Journal Article

    A patient with motor conversion disorder presented with a functional paresis of the left hand. After exclusion of structural brain damage, she was repeatedly examined with whole-brain functional magnetic resonance imaging, while she performed visually paced finger-tapping tasks. The dorsal premotor cortex showed a bilateral deactivation in the acute-subacute phase. Recovery from unilateral hand paresis was associated with a gradual increase in task-based activation of the dorsal premotor cortex bilaterally. The right medial prefrontal cortex displayed the opposite pattern, showing initial task-based activation that gradually diminished with recovery. The inverse dynamics of premotor and medial prefrontal activity over time were found during unimanual finger-tapping with the affected and non-affected hand as well as during bimanual finger-tapping. These observations suggest that reduced premotor and increased medial prefrontal activity reflect an effector-independent cortical dysfunction in conversion paresis which gradually disappears in parallel with clinical remission of paresis. The results link the medial prefrontal and dorsal premotor areas to the generation of intentional actions. We hypothesise that an excessive ‘veto’ signal generated in medial prefrontal cortex along with decreased premotor activity might constitute the functional substrate of conversion disorder. This notion warrants further examination in a larger group of affected patients. •We mapped finger-tapping activity in a patient recovering from conversion paresis.•Activity of dorsal premotor cortex gradually emerged during repeated fMRI sessions.•Conversely, medial prefrontal activity tapered off with recovery from paresis.•The pattern was also expressed during finger-tapping with the non-affected hand.•It may represent a substrate of cortical dysfunction in conversion disorder.