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Handedness Side and Magnetization Transfer Ratio in the Primary Sensorimotor Cortex Central Sulcus

Left-handers show lower asymmetry in manual ability when compared to right-handers. Unlike right-handers, left-handers do not show larger deactivation of the ipsilateral primary sensorimotor (SM1) cortex on functional magnetic resonance imaging when moving their dominant than their nondominant hand....

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Autores principales: Mascalchi, Mario, Ciulli, Stefano, Bianchi, Andrea, Marzi, Chiara, Orsolini, Stefano, Gavazzi, Gioele, Aiello, Marco, Nicolai, Emanuele, Soricelli, Andrea, Giannelli, Marco, Diciotti, Stefano
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6699472/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31467897
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/5610849
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author Mascalchi, Mario
Ciulli, Stefano
Bianchi, Andrea
Marzi, Chiara
Orsolini, Stefano
Gavazzi, Gioele
Aiello, Marco
Nicolai, Emanuele
Soricelli, Andrea
Giannelli, Marco
Diciotti, Stefano
author_facet Mascalchi, Mario
Ciulli, Stefano
Bianchi, Andrea
Marzi, Chiara
Orsolini, Stefano
Gavazzi, Gioele
Aiello, Marco
Nicolai, Emanuele
Soricelli, Andrea
Giannelli, Marco
Diciotti, Stefano
author_sort Mascalchi, Mario
collection PubMed
description Left-handers show lower asymmetry in manual ability when compared to right-handers. Unlike right-handers, left-handers do not show larger deactivation of the ipsilateral primary sensorimotor (SM1) cortex on functional magnetic resonance imaging when moving their dominant than their nondominant hand. However, it should be noted that morphometric MRI studies have reported no differences between right-handers and left-handers in volume, thickness, or surface area of the SM1 cortex. In this regard, magnetization transfer (MT) imaging is a technique with the potential to provide information on microstructural organization and macromolecular content of tissue. In particular, MT ratio index of the brain gray matter is assumed to reflect the variable content of afferent or efferent myelinated fibers, with higher MT ratio values being associated with increased fibers number or degree of myelination. The aim of this study was hence to assess, for the first time, through quantitative MT ratio measurements, potential differences in microstructural organization/characteristics of SM1 cortex between left- and right-handers, which could underlay handedness side. Nine left-handed and 9 right-handed healthy subjects, as determined by the Edinburgh handedness inventory, were examined with T(1)-weighted and MT-weighted imaging on a 3 T scanner. The hands of subjects were kept still during all acquisitions. Using FreeSurfer suite and the automatic anatomical labeling parcellations defined by the Destrieux atlas, we measured MT ratio, as well as cortical thickness, in three regions of interests corresponding to the precentral gyrus, the central sulcus, and the postcentral gyrus in the bilateral SM1 cortex. No significant difference between left- and right-handers was revealed in the thickness of the three partitions of the SM1 cortex. However, left-handers showed a significantly (p = 0.007) lower MT ratio (31.92%  ± 0.96%) in the right SM1 central sulcus (i.e., the hand representation area for left-handers) as compared to right-handers (33.28%  ± 0.94%). The results of this preliminary study indicate that quantitative MT imaging, unlike conventional morphometric MRI measurements, can be a useful tool to reveal, in SM1 cortex, potential microstructural correlates of handedness side.
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spelling pubmed-66994722019-08-29 Handedness Side and Magnetization Transfer Ratio in the Primary Sensorimotor Cortex Central Sulcus Mascalchi, Mario Ciulli, Stefano Bianchi, Andrea Marzi, Chiara Orsolini, Stefano Gavazzi, Gioele Aiello, Marco Nicolai, Emanuele Soricelli, Andrea Giannelli, Marco Diciotti, Stefano Biomed Res Int Research Article Left-handers show lower asymmetry in manual ability when compared to right-handers. Unlike right-handers, left-handers do not show larger deactivation of the ipsilateral primary sensorimotor (SM1) cortex on functional magnetic resonance imaging when moving their dominant than their nondominant hand. However, it should be noted that morphometric MRI studies have reported no differences between right-handers and left-handers in volume, thickness, or surface area of the SM1 cortex. In this regard, magnetization transfer (MT) imaging is a technique with the potential to provide information on microstructural organization and macromolecular content of tissue. In particular, MT ratio index of the brain gray matter is assumed to reflect the variable content of afferent or efferent myelinated fibers, with higher MT ratio values being associated with increased fibers number or degree of myelination. The aim of this study was hence to assess, for the first time, through quantitative MT ratio measurements, potential differences in microstructural organization/characteristics of SM1 cortex between left- and right-handers, which could underlay handedness side. Nine left-handed and 9 right-handed healthy subjects, as determined by the Edinburgh handedness inventory, were examined with T(1)-weighted and MT-weighted imaging on a 3 T scanner. The hands of subjects were kept still during all acquisitions. Using FreeSurfer suite and the automatic anatomical labeling parcellations defined by the Destrieux atlas, we measured MT ratio, as well as cortical thickness, in three regions of interests corresponding to the precentral gyrus, the central sulcus, and the postcentral gyrus in the bilateral SM1 cortex. No significant difference between left- and right-handers was revealed in the thickness of the three partitions of the SM1 cortex. However, left-handers showed a significantly (p = 0.007) lower MT ratio (31.92%  ± 0.96%) in the right SM1 central sulcus (i.e., the hand representation area for left-handers) as compared to right-handers (33.28%  ± 0.94%). The results of this preliminary study indicate that quantitative MT imaging, unlike conventional morphometric MRI measurements, can be a useful tool to reveal, in SM1 cortex, potential microstructural correlates of handedness side. Hindawi 2019-08-05 /pmc/articles/PMC6699472/ /pubmed/31467897 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/5610849 Text en Copyright © 2019 Mario Mascalchi et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mascalchi, Mario
Ciulli, Stefano
Bianchi, Andrea
Marzi, Chiara
Orsolini, Stefano
Gavazzi, Gioele
Aiello, Marco
Nicolai, Emanuele
Soricelli, Andrea
Giannelli, Marco
Diciotti, Stefano
Handedness Side and Magnetization Transfer Ratio in the Primary Sensorimotor Cortex Central Sulcus
title Handedness Side and Magnetization Transfer Ratio in the Primary Sensorimotor Cortex Central Sulcus
title_full Handedness Side and Magnetization Transfer Ratio in the Primary Sensorimotor Cortex Central Sulcus
title_fullStr Handedness Side and Magnetization Transfer Ratio in the Primary Sensorimotor Cortex Central Sulcus
title_full_unstemmed Handedness Side and Magnetization Transfer Ratio in the Primary Sensorimotor Cortex Central Sulcus
title_short Handedness Side and Magnetization Transfer Ratio in the Primary Sensorimotor Cortex Central Sulcus
title_sort handedness side and magnetization transfer ratio in the primary sensorimotor cortex central sulcus
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6699472/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31467897
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/5610849
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