4.5 Article

Cortical representations of phantom movements in lower limb amputees

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 53, Issue 9, Pages 3160-3174

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ejn.15170

Keywords

fMRI; legs; limb loss; phantom pain; transfemoral; transtibial

Categories

Funding

  1. David Mahoney Neuroimaging Program (The Dana Foundation)

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This study found that cortical activity in individuals with lower limb loss changes during movements of their sound and phantom limbs. Unlike upper limb amputees, less is known about SMC activity in lower limb amputees. The brain responses during phantom ankle movements did not correlate with self-report assessments of pain experiences, nonpainful sensations, and phantom movement capabilities.
Understanding how sensorimotor cortex (SMC) organization relates to limb loss has major clinical implications, as cortical activity associated with phantom hand movements has been shown to predict phantom pain reports. Critically, earlier studies have largely focused on upper limb amputees; far less is known regarding SMC activity in lower limb amputees, despite the fact that this population comprises the majority of major limb loss cases. We aimed to characterize BOLD fMRI responses associated with phantom and sound limb movements to test the hypothesis that SMC organization is preserved in individuals with lower limb loss. Individuals with unilateral or bilateral lower limb loss underwent fMRI scans as they performed simple movements of their sound or phantom limbs. We observed that voluntary movements of the sound and phantom ankles were associated with BOLD signal changes in medial and superior portions of the precentral and postcentral gyri. In both hemispheres, contralateral limb movements were associated with greater signal changes compared to ipsilateral limb movements. Hand and mouth movements were associated with distinct activation patterns localized to more lateral SMC regions. We additionally tested whether activations associated with phantom movements related to self-report assessments indexing phantom pain experiences, nonpainful phantom sensations and phantom movement capabilities. We found that responses during phantom ankle movements did not correlate with any of the composite phantom limb indices in our sample. Our collective results reveal that SMC representations of the amputated limb persist and that traditional somatotopic organization is generally preserved in individuals suffering from lower limb loss.

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