4.0 Article

Visuomotor processing is altered after peripheral nerve damage in neuralgic amyotrophy

期刊

BRAIN COMMUNICATIONS
卷 4, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/braincomms/fcac034

关键词

fMRI; mental hand rotation; motor imagery; maladaptive plasticity; sensorimotor system

资金

  1. Prinses Beatrix Spierfonds [W.OR16-05]

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Neuralgic amyotrophy is a common peripheral nerve disorder characterized by pain and weakness in the shoulder muscles. This study reveals that cerebral alterations in visuomotor brain areas contribute to residual motor dysfunction and persistent pain in neuralgic amyotrophy. These findings suggest that targeting visuomotor integration in rehabilitation interventions may help improve sensorimotor function in patients with this condition.
Neuralgic amyotrophy is a common peripheral nerve disorder caused by autoimmune inflammation of the brachial plexus, clinically characterized by acute pain and weakness of the shoulder muscles, followed by motor impairment. Despite recovery of the peripheral nerves, patients often have residual motor dysfunction of the upper extremity, leading to persistent pain related to altered biomechanics of the shoulder region. Building on clinical signs that suggest a role for cerebral mechanisms in these residual complaints, here we show and characterize cerebral alterations following neuralgic amyotrophy. Neuralgic amyotrophy patients often develop alternative motor strategies, which suggests that (mal)adaptations may occur in somatomotor and/or visuomotor brain areas. Here, we tested where changes in cerebral sensorimotor representations occur in neuralgic amyotrophy, while controlling for altered motor execution due to peripheral neuropathy. We additionally explore the relation between potential cerebral alterations in neuralgic amyotrophy and clinical symptoms. During functional MRI scanning, 39 neuralgic amyotrophy patients with persistent, lateralized symptoms in the right upper extremity and 23 matched healthy participants solved a hand laterality judgement task that can activate sensorimotor representations of the upper extremity, across somatomotor and visuomotor brain areas. Behavioural and cerebral responses confirmed the involvement of embodied, sensorimotor processes across groups. Compared with healthy participants, neuralgic amyotrophy patients were slower in hand laterality judgement and had decreased cerebral activity specific to their affected limb in two higher-order visual brain regions: the right extrastriate cortex and the parieto-occipital sulcus. Exploratory analyses revealed that across patients, extrastriate activity specific to the affected limb decreased as persistent pain increased, and affected limb-related parieto-occipital activity decreased as imagery performance of the affected limb became slower. These findings suggest that maladaptive cerebral plasticity in visuomotor areas involved in sensorimotor integration plays a role in residual motor dysfunction and subsequent persistent pain in neuralgic amyotrophy. Rehabilitation interventions that apply visuomotor strategies to improve sensorimotor integration may help to treat neuralgic amyotrophy patients. Peripheral nerve disorders may entail cerebral adaptations that contribute to clinical symptoms. In neuralgic amyotrophy, using functional MRI Lustenhouwer et al. observed disease-specific cerebral dysfunction in visuomotor brain areas. This identifies visuomotor integration as a possible target for treatment.

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