Literature DB >> 12423766

Human brain plasticity: an emerging view of the multiple substrates and mechanisms that cause cortical changes and related sensory dysfunctions after injuries of sensory inputs from the body.

J T Wall1, J Xu, X Wang.   

Abstract

Injuries of peripheral inputs from the body cause sensory dysfunctions that are thought to be attributable to functional changes in cerebral cortical maps of the body. Prevalent theories propose that these cortical changes are explained by mechanisms that preeminently operate within cortex. This paper reviews findings from humans and other primates that point to a very different explanation, i.e. that injury triggers an immediately initiated, and subsequently continuing, progression of mechanisms that alter substrates at multiple subcortical as well as cortical locations. As part of this progression, peripheral injuries cause surprisingly rapid neurochemical/molecular, functional, and structural changes in peripheral, spinal, and brainstem substrates. Moreover, recent comparisons of extents of subcortical and cortical map changes indicate that initial subcortical changes can be more extensive than cortical changes, and that over time cortical and subcortical extents of change reach new balances. Mechanisms for these changes are ubiquitous in subcortical and cortical substrates and include neurochemical/molecular changes that cause functional alterations of normal excitation and inhibition, atrophy and degeneration of normal substrates, and sprouting of new connections. The result is that injuries that begin in the body become rapidly further embodied in reorganizational make-overs of the entire core of the somatosensory brain, from peripheral sensory neurons to cortex. We suggest that sensory dysfunctions after nerve, root, dorsal column (spinal), and amputation injuries can be viewed as diseases of reorganization in this core.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 12423766     DOI: 10.1016/s0165-0173(02)00192-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Res Brain Res Rev


  51 in total

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7.  Subcortical reorganization in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

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8.  Rewiring of afferent fibers in the somatosensory thalamus of mice caused by peripheral sensory nerve transection.

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9.  Profiles of precentral and postcentral cortical mean thicknesses in individual subjects over acute and subacute time-scales.

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10.  Optogenetic-guided cortical plasticity after nerve injury.

Authors:  Nan Li; John E Downey; Amnon Bar-Shir; Assaf A Gilad; Piotr Walczak; Heechul Kim; Suresh E Joel; James J Pekar; Nitish V Thakor; Galit Pelled
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2011-05-09       Impact factor: 11.205

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