Wellcome Centre for Integrative Neuroimaging, FMRIB Centre, Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University Nijmegen, Nijmegen, the Netherlands.
Ann Neurol. 2019 Jan;85(1):59-73. doi: 10.1002/ana.25371. Epub 2019 Jan 7.
Phantom limb pain (PLP) is notoriously difficult to treat, partly due to an incomplete understanding of PLP-related disease mechanisms. Noninvasive brain stimulation (NIBS) is used to modulate plasticity in various neuropathological diseases, including chronic pain. Although NIBS can alleviate neuropathic pain (including PLP), both disease and treatment mechanisms remain tenuous. Insight into the mechanisms underlying both PLP and NIBS-induced PLP relief is needed for future implementation of such treatment and generalization to related conditions.
We used a within-participants, double-blind, and sham-controlled design to alleviate PLP via task-concurrent NIBS over the primary sensorimotor missing hand cortex (S1/M1). To specifically influence missing hand signal processing, amputees performed phantom hand movements during anodal transcranial direct current stimulation. Brain activity was monitored using neuroimaging during and after NIBS. PLP ratings were obtained throughout the week after stimulation.
A single session of intervention NIBS significantly relieved PLP, with effects lasting at least 1 week. PLP relief associated with reduced activity in the S1/M1 missing hand cortex after stimulation. Critically, PLP relief and reduced S1/M1 activity correlated with preceding activity changes during stimulation in the mid- and posterior insula and secondary somatosensory cortex (S2).
The observed correlation between PLP relief and decreased S1/M1 activity confirms our previous findings linking PLP with increased S1/M1 activity. Our results further highlight the driving role of the mid- and posterior insula, as well as S2, in modulating PLP. Lastly, our novel PLP intervention using task-concurrent NIBS opens new avenues for developing treatment for PLP and related pain conditions. ANN NEUROL 2019;85:59-73.
幻肢痛(PLP)的治疗极具挑战性,部分原因是对其相关疾病机制的认识尚不完全。非侵入性脑刺激(NIBS)用于调节各种神经病理学疾病的可塑性,包括慢性疼痛。尽管 NIBS 可以缓解神经性疼痛(包括 PLP),但疾病和治疗机制仍然不确定。需要深入了解 PLP 和 NIBS 缓解 PLP 的机制,以便将来实施这种治疗并推广到相关疾病。
我们使用了参与者内、双盲和假对照设计,通过在初级感觉运动缺失手皮层(S1/M1)上进行任务伴随的经颅直流电刺激来缓解 PLP。为了专门影响缺失手的信号处理,截肢者在阳极经颅直流电刺激期间进行幻手运动。在刺激期间和之后使用神经影像学监测大脑活动。在刺激后的一周内,获得了 PLP 评分。
单次干预性 NIBS 显著缓解了 PLP,其效果至少持续 1 周。刺激后 S1/M1 缺失手皮层的活动减少与 PLP 缓解相关。至关重要的是,PLP 缓解和 S1/M1 活性的减少与刺激期间中后岛和次级体感皮层(S2)中的活性变化相关。
观察到的 PLP 缓解与 S1/M1 活性降低之间的相关性证实了我们之前的研究结果,即 PLP 与 S1/M1 活性增加有关。我们的结果进一步强调了中后岛以及 S2 在调节 PLP 中的驱动作用。最后,我们使用任务伴随的 NIBS 对 PLP 进行了新的干预,为开发 PLP 及相关疼痛疾病的治疗方法开辟了新途径。ANN NEUROL 2019;85:59-73.