Klinische Neurophysiologie 2004; 35 - 73
DOI: 10.1055/s-2004-831985

Functional Dissociation of a Subcortical and a Cortical Component of High-Frequency Oscillations in Human SEPs by Motor Interference

R Gobbelé 1, TD Waberski 2, F Klostermann 3, G Curio 4, H Buchner 5
  • 1Aachen
  • 2Aachen
  • 3Berlin
  • 4Berlin
  • 5Recklinghausen

To identify the possibly divergent impact on early and late high-frequency oscillations (HFOs) in human somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs), we have studied motor interference effects on the HFOs, and the relevance of such effects for the controversy concerning their origins. While the late HFO is thought to be generated in the somatosensory cortex, there is an ongoing discussion whether the early burst is of cortical or subcortical origin. Movements of the index finger were performed in parallel with median nerve SEP recordings. The intracortically generated N20-SEP and the late HFO were attenuated by the motor task, while the brainstem low-frequency P14-SEP and the early HFO remained unaffected. These differing effects are consistent with a generation of the early HFOs by cortical presynaptic activity in terminals of the thalamocortical projection, and confirm a postsynaptic intracortical origin of the late burst subcomponent.