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Activation in primary and secondary motor areas in patients with CNS neoplasms and weakness

93

Citations

46

References

2002

Year

Abstract

The signal loss in areas adjacent to tumor tissue may relate either to tumor-induced changes in cerebral hemodynamics or to a direct loss of cortical neurons resulting in a lesser degree of hemodynamic changes after motor activation. The increase in activation within secondary motor areas with increasing degrees of paresis supports the growing evidence of a practice- and lesion-dependent reorganization of the cortical motor system and the ability of the brain to modulate its excitatory output according to external demands.

References

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