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A triggered hyperkinesia induced in rats by lesions of the corpus striatum
Berridge, Kent C.; Fentress, John C.; Treit, Dallas
1988-02
Citation:Berridge, Kent C., Fentress, John C., Treit, Dallas (1988/02)."A triggered hyperkinesia induced in rats by lesions of the corpus striatum." Experimental Neurology 99(2): 259-268. <http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/27415>
Abstract: The role of the corpus striatum (caudate, putamen, and globus pallidus) in movement control has been suggested to involve the modulation of sensory traffic to down-stream motor mechanisms. We report that kainic acid lesions of the posterior corpus striatum, which preferentially spare fibers of passage while destroying striatopallidal neurons, produce a stimulus-sensitive movement pattern in rats that has a highly specific sensory trigger. The triggered choreic movement pattern is not a motor pathology per se, nor a response to diffuse states of arousal or stress, but rather is activated specifically in response to oral sensory stimulation. This sensory-specific hyperkinesia may be relevant to certain human sensorimotor pathologies.