Document detail
ID

oai:pubmedcentral.nih.gov:1017...

Topic
Research
Author
Moscatelli, Fiorenzo Toto, Giusi Antonia Valenzano, Anna Cibelli, Giuseppe Monda, Vincenzo Limone, Pierpaolo Mancini, Nicola Messina, Antonietta Marsala, Gabriella Messina, Giovanni Polito, Rita
Langue
en
Editor

BioMed Central

Category

BMC Neuroscience

Year

2023

listing date

12/11/2023

Keywords
players study mep hf stimulation volleyball coordination
Metrics

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: It is widely demonstrated that high frequency (HF) repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) has facilitative effects and is therefore capable to inducing changes in motor responses.

One of the most investigated areas is the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) as it plays a special executive attention role in actively preserving access to stimulus representations and objectives in environments with plenty of distraction such as those of team sports.

Volleyball is a team sport in which the attention and coordination components are essential for achieving performance.

Thus, the aim of this study was to investigate if HF rTMS at DLPFC in volleyball players can improve homolateral motor coordination and cortical excitability.

RESULTS: This study was a double-blinded (participant and evaluator) matched-pair experimental design.

Twenty right-handed female volleyball players were recruited for the study and were randomly assigned either the active rTMS (n = 10) or the sham stimulation group (n = 10).

The stimulation was performed in one session with 10 Hz, 80% of the resting motor threshold (RMT) of the right first dorsal interosseous muscle, 5 s of stimulation, and 15 s of rest, for a total of 1500 pulses.

Before and after stimulation, the coordination and the cortical excitability were evaluated.

The significant finding of this paper was that HF-rTMS of the DLPFC improved performance in terms of the homolateral interlimb coordination, with a significantly decreased in resting motor threshold and MEP latency of the ipsilateral motor cortex.

It seem that HF-rTMS could increase coordination performances when the velocity of the execution is higher (120 bpm and 180 bpm).

CONCLUSION: Moreover, in active rTMS group significant differences emerged after stimulation in RMT and in MEP latency, while no differences emerged after stimulation in MEP amplitude.

In conclusion we believe that these results may be of great interest to the scientific community and may also have practical implications in the future.

Moscatelli, Fiorenzo,Toto, Giusi Antonia,Valenzano, Anna,Cibelli, Giuseppe,Monda, Vincenzo,Limone, Pierpaolo,Mancini, Nicola,Messina, Antonietta,Marsala, Gabriella,Messina, Giovanni,Polito, Rita, 2023, High frequencies (HF) repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) increase motor coordination performances in volleyball players, BioMed Central

Document

Open Open

Share

Source

Articles recommended by ES/IODE AI

Diabetes and obesity: the role of stress in the development of cancer
stress diabetes mellitus obesity cancer non-communicable chronic disease stress diabetes obesity patients cause cancer