Motor training improves impaired cortico-cerebellar connectivity in cerebellar ataxia

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Abstract

People with cerebellar degeneration show characteristic ataxic motor impairments. Despite cerebellar dysfunction, they can still improve motor performance through sensorimotor training. Yet, how such training affects functional brain networks affected by cerebellar degeneration is unknown. We here investigated neuroplastic changes in the cortico-cerebellar network after a five-day forearm movement training in 40 patients with mild to severe cerebellar degeneration and 40 age- and sex-matched healthy controls. Participants were assigned to one of four motor training conditions, varying online visual feedback and explicit verbal feedback. Anatomical and resting-state fMRI was collected on the days before and after training. To overcome the limitations of standard brain templates that fail in the presence of severe anatomical abnormalities, we developed a specific template for comparing cerebellar patients with age-matched controls. Our new template reduced the spatial spread of cerebellar anatomical landmarks by 30% relative to existing templates and tripled fMRI noise classification accuracy. Using this pipeline, we found that patients showed impaired connectivity between cerebellar motor regions and neocortical visuomotor and premotor regions at baseline compared to controls, whereas their cortico-cortical connectivity remained intact. Training with vision strengthened connectivity in the cortico-cerebellar visuomotor network contralateral to the trained arm in all participants. Cerebellar patients exhibited additional increased connectivity ipsilateral to the training arm in this network. Further, training with explicit verbal feedback facilitated connectivity between a cerebellar cognitive region and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. These results indicate that motor training in cerebellar degeneration leads to enhanced functional connectivity of the cortico-cerebellar network.

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