Brodie Eric E, Whyte Anne, Niven Catherine A
Department of Psychology, Glasgow Caledonian University, Glasgow G4 0BA, UK.
Eur J Pain. 2007 May;11(4):428-36. doi: 10.1016/j.ejpain.2006.06.002. Epub 2006 Jul 20.
The extent to which viewing a 'virtual' limb, the mirror image of an intact limb, modifies the experience of a phantom limb, was investigated in 80 lower limb amputees before, during and after repeated attempts to simultaneously move both intact and phantom legs. Subjects were randomly assigned to one of two conditions, a control condition in which they only viewed the movements of their intact limb and a mirror condition in which they additionally viewed the movements of a 'virtual' limb. Although the mirror condition elicited a significantly greater number of phantom limb movements than the control condition, it did not attenuate phantom limb pain and sensations any more than the control condition. The potential of a 'virtual' limb as a treatment for phantom limb pain was discussed in terms of its ability to halt and/or reverse the cortical re-organisation of motor and somatosensory cortex following acquired limb loss.
在80名下肢截肢者中,研究了观看“虚拟”肢体(完整肢体的镜像)对幻肢体验的改变程度,研究在同时反复尝试移动完整腿和幻腿之前、期间及之后进行。受试者被随机分配到两种情况之一,一种是对照情况,即他们只观看自己完整肢体的运动;另一种是镜像情况,即他们还观看“虚拟”肢体的运动。尽管镜像情况比对照情况引发了显著更多的幻肢运动,但它在减轻幻肢疼痛和感觉方面并不比对照情况更有效。从其阻止和/或逆转后天肢体缺失后运动和体感皮层的皮质重组的能力方面,讨论了“虚拟”肢体作为幻肢痛治疗方法的潜力。