| Literature DB >> 25520432 |
Giulia Dormal1, Franco Lepore2, Mona Harissi-Dagher3, Geneviève Albouy4, Armando Bertone5, Bruno Rossion6, Olivier Collignon7.
Abstract
Visual deprivation leads to massive reorganization in both the structure and function of the occipital cortex, raising crucial challenges for sight restoration. We tracked the behavioral, structural, and neurofunctional changes occurring in an early and severely visually impaired patient before and 1.5 and 7 mo after sight restoration with magnetic resonance imaging. Robust presurgical auditory responses were found in occipital cortex despite residual preoperative vision. In primary visual cortex, crossmodal auditory responses overlapped with visual responses and remained elevated even 7 mo after surgery. However, these crossmodal responses decreased in extrastriate occipital regions after surgery, together with improved behavioral vision and with increases in both gray matter density and neural activation in low-level visual regions. Selective responses in high-level visual regions involved in motion and face processing were observable even before surgery and did not evolve after surgery. Taken together, these findings demonstrate that structural and functional reorganization of occipital regions are present in an individual with a long-standing history of severe visual impairment and that such reorganizations can be partially reversed by visual restoration in adulthood.Entities:
Keywords: blindness; crossmodal plasticity; sight recovery; ventral-dorsal pathways
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25520432 PMCID: PMC4359990 DOI: 10.1152/jn.00420.2014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurophysiol ISSN: 0022-3077 Impact factor: 2.714