Cervical Dystonia: A Disorder of the Midbrain Network for Covert Attentional Orienting. (Research supported by FDR)
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Cervical Dystonia: A Disorder of the Midbrain Network for Covert Attentional Orienting. (Research supported by FDR)
Hutchinson M, Isa T, Molloy A, Kimmich O, Williams L, Molloy F, Moore H, Healy DG, Lynch T, Walsh C, Butler J, Reilly RB, ... - June 15, 2014
http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fneur.2014.00054/abstract
Prof. Michael Hutchinson and his team from the St. Vincent's University Hospital in Dublin (Ireland) hypothesize that both abnormal temporal discrimination and cervical dystonia are due to a disorder of the midbrain network for covert attentional orienting caused by reduced gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) inhibition, resulting, in turn, from as yet undetermined, genetic mutations. Such disinhibition is (a) subclinically manifested by abnormal temporal discrimination due to prolonged duration firing of the visual sensory neurons in the superficial laminae of the superior colliculus and (b) clinically manifested by cervical dystonia due to disinhibited burst activity of the cephalomotor neurons of the intermediate and deep laminae of the superior colliculus. Abnormal temporal discrimination in unaffected first-degree relatives of patients with cervical dystonia represents a subclinical manifestation of defective GABA activity both within the superior colliculus and from the substantia nigra pars reticulata. A number of experiments are required to prove or disprove this hypothesis.
The research of Prof. Michael Hutchinson is supported by the Foundation for Dystonia Research.
Read more:
http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fneur.2014.00054/abstract