Moore C E, Schady W
Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, The Royal Infirmary, Manchester, UK.
Brain. 2000 Sep;123 ( Pt 9):1883-95. doi: 10.1093/brain/123.9.1883.
Much work in animals and humans has demonstrated the existence of changes in topographic organization within the somatosensory cortex (SSC) after amputation or nerve injury. Afferent inputs from one area of skin are able to activate novel areas of cortex after amputation of an adjacent body part. We have investigated the functional consequences of this reorganization in a group of patients with nerve injury. Using the microneurographic technique of intraneural microstimulation (INMS) we stimulated groups of nerve fibres, within individual fascicles proximal to the nerve transection, with small electrical pulses. This enabled us to activate the deafferented cortex that had presumably undergone remodelling and study the conscious percepts described by the subjects. In 39 fascicles from 10 subjects, we found that the sensations evoked on INMS were no different from those reported previously by subjects with intact nerves. This finding suggests that such reorganization within the SSC has little effect on the function of deafferented cortical neurones or subcortical relay stations. In a separate set of experiments, INMS was performed in 16 nerve fascicles from an adjacent non-injured nerve or uninjured fascicle within a partially injured nerve. The sensations evoked by INMS in these experiments were also comparable to those obtained in normal subjects. This indicates that the expanded cortical representation of adjacent non-anaesthetic skin does not influence the cortical processing of afferent information. Taken together, these findings lead us to question the notion that reorganization of connections within the somatosensory cortex equates to a change in function. Whilst it may be advantageous that the human brain is not 'hard-wired', neurophysiological proof of functional plasticity in the adult somatosensory system as a result of deafferentation is elusive.
在动物和人类身上进行的大量研究表明,截肢或神经损伤后,体感皮层(SSC)内的地形组织会发生变化。在相邻身体部位截肢后,来自皮肤某一区域的传入输入能够激活新的皮层区域。我们研究了一组神经损伤患者这种重组的功能后果。我们使用神经内微刺激(INMS)的微神经图技术,用小电脉冲刺激神经横断近端单个束内的神经纤维群。这使我们能够激活可能已经重塑的去传入皮层,并研究受试者描述的有意识感知。在10名受试者的39个束中,我们发现INMS诱发的感觉与之前神经完好的受试者报告的感觉没有差异。这一发现表明,SSC内的这种重组对去传入皮层神经元或皮层下中继站的功能影响很小。在另一组实验中,对来自相邻未受伤神经或部分受伤神经内未受伤束的16个神经束进行了INMS。这些实验中INMS诱发的感觉也与正常受试者获得的感觉相当。这表明相邻非麻醉皮肤的扩大皮层表征不会影响传入信息的皮层处理。综上所述,这些发现让我们质疑体感皮层内连接重组等同于功能变化这一观点。虽然人类大脑并非“硬连线”可能是有利的,但去传入导致成人体感系统功能可塑性的神经生理学证据却难以捉摸。