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A. Maertens de Noordhout
Researcher at University of Liège
Publications - 37
Citations - 6237
A. Maertens de Noordhout is an academic researcher from University of Liège. The author has contributed to research in topics: Motor cortex & Electromyography. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 33 publications receiving 5952 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Non-invasive electrical and magnetic stimulation of the brain, spinal cord and roots: basic principles and procedures for routine clinical application. Report of an IFCN committee
Paolo Maria Rossini,A.T. Barker,Alfredo Berardelli,Maria D. Caramia,Giuseppe Caruso,Roger Q. Cracco,Milan R. Dimitrijevic,Mark Hallett,Yoichi Katayama,Carl Hermann Lücking,A. Maertens de Noordhout,C. D. Marsden,N. M. F. Murray,John C. Rothwell,Michael Swash,C. Tomberg +15 more
TL;DR: This year's jurors included A.M.
Journal ArticleDOI
Electric and magnetic stimulation of human motor cortex: surface EMG and single motor unit responses.
Brian L. Day,D. Dressler,A. Maertens de Noordhout,C. D. Marsden,K. Nakashima,John C. Rothwell,Pd Thompson +6 more
TL;DR: The effects of different forms of brain stimulation on the discharge pattern of single motor units were examined using the post‐stimulus time histogram (PSTH) technique and by recording the compound surface electromyographic (EMG) responses in the first dorsal interosseous muscle.
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Hypothalamic stimulation in chronic cluster headache: a pilot study of efficacy and mode of action.
Jean Schoenen,L. Di Clemente,Michel Vandenheede,Arnaud Fumal,V De Pasqua,M. Mouchamps,J. M. Remacle,A. Maertens de Noordhout +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a pilot trial of neuro-stimulation of the ipsilateral ventroposterior hypothalamus using the stereotactic coordinates was conducted to evaluate the effect of the stimulator on patients with refractory chronic cluster headache.
Journal ArticleDOI
Delay in the execution of voluntary movement by electrical or magnetic brain stimulation in intact man: evidence for the storage of motor programs in the brain
Brian L. Day,Jc Rothwell,Pd Thompson,A. Maertens de Noordhout,K. Nakashima,K. Shannon,C. D. Marsden +6 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that the brain stimulus delayed movement by inhibiting a group of strategically placed neurons in the brain which made them unresponsive for a brief period to the command signals they receive which initiate the motor program of agonist and antagonist muscle activity.
Journal ArticleDOI
Effects of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation on visual evoked potentials in migraine.
V. Bohotin,Arnaud Fumal,Michel Vandenheede,Pascale Gerard,C. Bohotin,A. Maertens de Noordhout,Jean Schoenen +6 more
TL;DR: The recovery of a normal PR-VEP habituation pattern after high-frequency rTMS is probably due to activation of the visual cortex and the dishabituation in healthy volunteers to cortical inhibition, not to an increased, pre-activation excitability level of theVisual cortex.