Cerebral magnetic fields preceding self-paced plantar flexions of the feet were studied with a SQUID gradiometer in 4 subjects. A slow magnetoencephalographic (MEG) shift was observed to begin as early as 1 sec before the movement. The shift changed its polarity between frontal and parietal areas. The MEG shifts preceding right and left foot movements were similar in shape, but their polarities differed at many recording locations. Simultaneous movements of both feet were preceded by shifts approximately equal to the sum of the shifts preceding the unilateral foot movements at the same recording location. The results suggest that the EEG and MEG shifts preceding foot movements are largely generated by tangential current sources on the mesial surface of the contralateral hemisphere around the motor representation area of the foot.
Slow EEG shifts preceding voluntary self-paced plantar flexions of hand and foot were studied in five healthy right handed subjects. The EEG was recorded from a coronal electrode chain at the central areas. The movements were preceded by slow negative shifts beginning even as early as one second before the movement and culminating in fast slopes during the early EMG activity at the onset of the movements. The EEG shifts preceding hand and foot movements were differently distributed over the scalp: hand movements were preceded by contralaterally maximal shifts a few hundred milliseconds before the movement, whereas the potential distribution preceding foot movements were symmetrical or ipsilaterally dominant. It is suggested that the differences in the scalp distributions are due to the different orientation of the current dipoles at the cortical motor areas of hand and foot.
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