Department of Psychology, University of Bath, Bath, North East Somerset, UK.
Centre for Pain Research, University of Bath, Bath, North East Somerset, UK.
Brain. 2017 Sep 1;140(9):2306-2321. doi: 10.1093/brain/awx152.
See Legrain (doi:10.1093/awx188) for a scientific commentary on this article. Some patients with complex regional pain syndrome report that movements of the affected limb are slow, more effortful, and lack automaticity. These symptoms have been likened to the syndrome that sometimes follows brain injury called hemispatial neglect, in which patients exhibit attentional impairments and problems with movements affecting the contralesional side of the body and space. Psychophysical testing of patients with complex regional pain syndrome has found evidence for spatial biases when judging visual targets distanced at 2 m, but not in directions that indicate reduced attention to the affected side. In contrast, when judging visual or tactile stimuli presented on their own body surface, or pictures of hands and feet within arm's reach, patients with complex regional pain syndrome exhibited a bias away from the affected side. What is not yet known is whether patients with complex regional pain syndrome only have biased attention for bodily-specific information in the space within arm's reach, or whether they also show a bias for information that is not associated with the body, suggesting a more generalized attention deficit. Using a temporal order judgement task, we found that patients with complex regional pain syndrome processed visual stimuli more slowly on the affected side (relative to the unaffected side) when the lights were projected onto a blank surface (i.e. when no bodily information was visible), and when the lights were projected onto the dorsal surfaces of their uncrossed hands. However, with the arms crossed (such that the left and right lights projected onto the right and left hands, respectively), patients' responses were no different than controls. These results provide the first demonstration of a generalized attention bias away from the affected side of space in complex regional pain syndrome patients that is not specifically related to bodily information. They also suggest a separate and additional bias of visual attention away from the affected hand. The strength of attention bias was predicted by scores on a self-report measure of body perception distortion; but not by pain intensity, time since diagnosis, or affected body side (left or right). At an individual level, those patients whose upper limbs were most affected had a higher incidence of inattention than those whose lower limbs were most affected. However, at a group level, affected limb (upper or lower) did not predict bias magnitude; nor did three measures designed to assess possible asymmetries in the distribution of movements across space. It is concluded that inattention in near space in complex regional pain syndrome may arise in parallel with a distorted perception of the body.10.1093/brain/awx152_video1awx152media15495542665001.
有关本文的科学评论,请参阅 Legrain(doi:10.1093/awx188)。一些患有复杂性区域疼痛综合征的患者报告说,受影响的肢体运动缓慢、费力且缺乏自主性。这些症状类似于有时在脑损伤后出现的偏侧空间忽略综合征,在该综合征中,患者表现出注意力损伤和对身体对侧和空间的运动问题。对复杂性区域疼痛综合征患者的心理物理学测试发现,在判断距离 2 米的视觉目标时存在空间偏差,但在表示对受影响侧注意力降低的方向上没有发现偏差。相比之下,当判断自身身体表面上呈现的视觉或触觉刺激,或手臂可触及范围内的手和脚的图片时,复杂性区域疼痛综合征患者表现出远离受影响侧的偏差。目前尚不清楚的是,复杂性区域疼痛综合征患者是否仅对臂内空间内的身体特定信息具有偏向性注意力,或者他们是否也表现出对与身体无关的信息的偏向性,这表明存在更广泛的注意力缺陷。使用时间顺序判断任务,我们发现,当灯光投射到空白表面(即当没有身体信息可见时),以及当灯光投射到未交叉手的背面时,复杂性区域疼痛综合征患者的受影响侧(相对于未受影响侧)处理视觉刺激的速度较慢。然而,当手臂交叉时(例如,左右灯光分别投射到右手和左手),患者的反应与对照组没有不同。这些结果首次证明,在复杂性区域疼痛综合征患者中,存在一种从受影响的空间侧发散的普遍注意力偏差,这种偏差与身体信息无关。它们还表明,对视觉注意力存在从受影响的手发散的单独且额外的偏差。注意力偏差的强度可由身体感知扭曲的自我报告测量得分预测;但不能由疼痛强度、诊断后时间或受影响的身体侧(左侧或右侧)预测。在个体水平上,上肢受影响最严重的患者比下肢受影响最严重的患者注意力不集中的发生率更高。然而,在群体水平上,受影响的肢体(上肢或下肢)并不能预测偏差幅度;也不能预测旨在评估运动在空间中分布的可能不对称性的三个测量值。结论是,复杂性区域疼痛综合征患者近空间的注意力不集中可能与身体感知的扭曲同时发生。10.1093/brain/awx152_video1awx152media15495542665001.