RESUMEN
Oral application of atropine was used to test if a modulation of cholinergic neurotransmission changed motor excitability. Healthy volunteers received either 1 or 2 mg atropine. Paired transcranial magnetic stimulation was used to study intracortical inhibition and intracortical facilitation before, 1 h and 24 h after ingestion of atropine. In addition, the silent period, motor threshold, F wave and motor response amplitudes were measured. The 1 mg dose of atropine induced a loss of intracortical inhibition, the 2 mg dose produced an intracortical disinhibition and enhanced intracortical facilitation. These changes returned to baseline after 24 h. Other electrophysiological parameters remained unchanged. Thus, an antagonist of pre- and postsynaptic muscarinic receptors increased excitability in the human motor cortex in a dose-dependent manner, indicating an influence of the cholinergic system on motor cortex excitation.