4.5 Article

Somatosensory and motor representations following bilateral transplants of the hands: A 6-year longitudinal case report on the first pediatric bilateral hand transplant patient

Journal

BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 1804, Issue -, Pages -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.brainres.2023.148262

Keywords

Magnetoencephalography (MEG); Cortical reorganization; Allotransplantation; Neural plasticity; Pediatrics; Sensorimotor oscillations; Vascularised composite allotransplants (VCA)

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A vascularized composite tissue allotransplantation (VCA) was performed on an 8-year-old patient at CHOP in 2015, resulting in the restoration of hand somatosensation and motor function. Magnetoencephalography (MEG) was used to assess cortical plasticity of the hands' sensory nerves. The results showed that the restoration of somatosensory input led to persistent and atypically large cortical responses to digit stimulation, which remained stable at 6 years post-transplant with no perceptual correlate or phantom pain reported.
A vascularized composite tissue allotransplantation (VCA) was performed at the Children's Hospital of Phila-delphia (CHOP), on an 8-year-old patient in 2015, six years after bilateral hand and foot amputation. Hand VCA resulted in reafferentation of the medial, ulnar, and radial nerves serving hand somatosensation and motor function. We used magnetoencephalography (MEG) to assess somatosensory cortical plasticity following the post-transplantation recovery of the peripheral sensory nerves of the hands. Our 2-year postoperative MEG showed that somatosensory lip representations, initially observed at hand areas, reverted to canonical, orthotopic lip locations with recovery of post-transplant hand function. Here, we continue the assessment of motor and somatosensory responses up to 6-years post-transplant. Magnetoencephalographic somatosensory responses were recorded eight times over a six-year period following hand transplantation, using a 275-channel MEG system. Somatosensory tactile stimuli were presented to the right lower lip (all 8 visits) as well as right and left index fingers (visits 3-8) and fifth digits (visits 4-8). In addition, left and right-hand motor responses were also recorded for left index finger and right thumb (visit 8 only).During the acute recovery phase (visits 3 and 4), somatosensory responses of the digits were observed to be significantly larger and more phasic (i.e., smoother) than controls. Subsequent measures showed that digit responses maintain this atypical response profile (evoked -response magnitudes typically exceed 1 picoTesla). Orthotopic somatosensory localization of the lip, D2, and D5 was preserved. Motor beta-band desynchrony was age-typical in localization and response magnitude; however, the motor gamma-band response was significantly larger than that observed in a reference population.These novel findings show that the restoration of somatosensory input of the hands resulted in persistent and atypically large cortical responses to digit stimulation, which remain atypically large at 6 years post-transplant; there is no known perceptual correlate, and no reports of phantom pain. Normal somatosensory organization of the lip, D2, and D5 representation remain stable following post-recovery reorganization of the lip's somatosensory response.

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