Literature DB >> 29088353

Upper limb cortical maps in amputees with targeted muscle and sensory reinnervation.

Andrea Serino1,2,3, Michel Akselrod1,2,3, Roy Salomon1,2,4, Roberto Martuzzi1,2,5, Maria Laura Blefari1,2, Elisa Canzoneri1,2, Giulio Rognini1,2, Wietske van der Zwaag6,7, Maria Iakova8, François Luthi8, Amedeo Amoresano9, Todd Kuiken10, Olaf Blanke1,2,11.   

Abstract

Neuroprosthetics research in amputee patients aims at developing new prostheses that move and feel like real limbs. Targeted muscle and sensory reinnervation (TMSR) is such an approach and consists of rerouting motor and sensory nerves from the residual limb towards intact muscles and skin regions. Movement of the myoelectric prosthesis is enabled via decoded electromyography activity from reinnervated muscles and touch sensation on the missing limb is enabled by stimulation of the reinnervated skin areas. Here we ask whether and how motor control and redirected somatosensory stimulation provided via TMSR affected the maps of the upper limb in primary motor (M1) and primary somatosensory (S1) cortex, as well as their functional connections. To this aim, we tested three TMSR patients and investigated the extent, strength, and topographical organization of the missing limb and several control body regions in M1 and S1 at ultra high-field (7 T) functional magnetic resonance imaging. Additionally, we analysed the functional connectivity between M1 and S1 and of both these regions with fronto-parietal regions, known to be important for multisensory upper limb processing. These data were compared with those of control amputee patients (n = 6) and healthy controls (n = 12). We found that M1 maps of the amputated limb in TMSR patients were similar in terms of extent, strength, and topography to healthy controls and different from non-TMSR patients. S1 maps of TMSR patients were also more similar to normal conditions in terms of topographical organization and extent, as compared to non-targeted muscle and sensory reinnervation patients, but weaker in activation strength compared to healthy controls. Functional connectivity in TMSR patients between upper limb maps in M1 and S1 was comparable with healthy controls, while being reduced in non-TMSR patients. However, connectivity was reduced between S1 and fronto-parietal regions, in both the TMSR and non-TMSR patients with respect to healthy controls. This was associated with the absence of a well-established multisensory effect (visual enhancement of touch) in TMSR patients. Collectively, these results show how M1 and S1 process signals related to movement and touch are enabled by targeted muscle and sensory reinnervation. Moreover, they suggest that TMSR may counteract maladaptive cortical plasticity typically found after limb loss, in M1, partially in S1, and in their mutual connectivity. The lack of multisensory interaction in the present data suggests that further engineering advances are necessary (e.g. the integration of somatosensory feedback into current prostheses) to enable prostheses that move and feel as real limbs.
© The Author (2017). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Entities:  

Keywords:  7 T functional MRI; TMSR; primary motor and somatosensory representations

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29088353     DOI: 10.1093/brain/awx242

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain        ISSN: 0006-8950            Impact factor:   13.501


  21 in total

1.  Targeted muscle reinnervation in oncologic amputees: Early experience of a novel institutional protocol.

Authors:  John H Alexander; Sumanas W Jordan; Julie M West; Amy Compston; Jennifer Fugitt; J Byers Bowen; Gregory A Dumanian; Raphael Pollock; Joel L Mayerson; Thomas J Scharschmidt; Ian L Valerio
Journal:  J Surg Oncol       Date:  2019-06-13       Impact factor: 3.454

2.  Physiological and Neural Changes with Rehabilitation Training in a 53-Year Amputee: A Case Study.

Authors:  Lin Mao; Xiao Lu; Chao Yu; Kuiying Yin
Journal:  Brain Sci       Date:  2022-06-26

3.  Malleability of the cortical hand map following a finger nerve block.

Authors:  Daan B Wesselink; Zeena-Britt Sanders; Laura R Edmondson; Harriet Dempsey-Jones; Paulina Kieliba; Sanne Kikkert; Andreas C Themistocleous; Uzay Emir; Jörn Diedrichsen; Hannes P Saal; Tamar R Makin
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2022-04-22       Impact factor: 14.957

4.  Revision Targeted Muscle Reinnervation Improves Secondary Pain Insult in an Upper Extremity Amputee: A Case Report.

Authors:  David D Rivedal; Meng Guo; James Sanger; Aaron Morgan
Journal:  Hand (N Y)       Date:  2021-02-17

5.  A cutaneous mechanoneural interface for neuroprosthetic feedback.

Authors:  Shriya S Srinivasan; Hugh M Herr
Journal:  Nat Biomed Eng       Date:  2021-02-01       Impact factor: 29.234

6.  The Stochastic Entanglement and Phantom Motor Execution Hypotheses: A Theoretical Framework for the Origin and Treatment of Phantom Limb Pain.

Authors:  Max Ortiz-Catalan
Journal:  Front Neurol       Date:  2018-09-06       Impact factor: 4.003

7.  Augmented manipulation ability in humans with six-fingered hands.

Authors:  C Mehring; M Akselrod; L Bashford; M Mace; H Choi; M Blüher; A-S Buschhoff; T Pistohl; R Salomon; A Cheah; O Blanke; A Serino; E Burdet
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2019-06-03       Impact factor: 14.919

8.  Restoring Tactile sensations via neural interfaces for real-time force-and-slippage closed-loop control of bionic hands.

Authors:  Loredana Zollo; Giovanni Di Pino; Vincenzo Denaro; Eugenio Guglielmelli; Anna L Ciancio; Federico Ranieri; Francesca Cordella; Cosimo Gentile; Emiliano Noce; Rocco A Romeo; Alberto Dellacasa Bellingegni; Gianluca Vadalà; Sandra Miccinilli; Alessandro Mioli; Lorenzo Diaz-Balzani; Marco Bravi; Klaus-P Hoffmann; Andreas Schneider; Luca Denaro; Angelo Davalli; Emanuele Gruppioni; Rinaldo Sacchetti; Simona Castellano; Vincenzo Di Lazzaro; Silvia Sterzi
Journal:  Sci Robot       Date:  2019-02-20

9.  Sensory stimulation enhances phantom limb perception and movement decoding.

Authors:  Luke E Osborn; Keqin Ding; Mark A Hays; Rohit Bose; Mark M Iskarous; Andrei Dragomir; Zied Tayeb; György M Lévay; Christopher L Hunt; Gordon Cheng; Robert S Armiger; Anastasios Bezerianos; Matthew S Fifer; Nitish V Thakor
Journal:  J Neural Eng       Date:  2020-10-20       Impact factor: 5.043

10.  Sensory- and Action-Oriented Embodiment of Neurally-Interfaced Robotic Hand Prostheses.

Authors:  Giovanni Di Pino; Daniele Romano; Chiara Spaccasassi; Alessandro Mioli; Marco D'Alonzo; Rinaldo Sacchetti; Eugenio Guglielmelli; Loredana Zollo; Vincenzo Di Lazzaro; Vincenzo Denaro; Angelo Maravita
Journal:  Front Neurosci       Date:  2020-05-07       Impact factor: 5.152

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