SAMBA (SpAtial, Motor & Bodily Awareness) Research Group, Department of Psychology, University of Turin, Turin, Italy.
SAMBA (SpAtial, Motor & Bodily Awareness) Research Group, Department of Psychology, University of Turin, Turin, Italy.
Cortex. 2019 Dec;121:253-263. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2019.08.021. Epub 2019 Sep 21.
Comprehending the nature of tactile disorders following brain damage is crucial to understand how the brain constructs sensory awareness. Stroke patients may be unaware of being touched on the affected hand if, simultaneously, they are touched on the unaffected hand (i.e., tactile extinction). More rarely, they feel touches on the two hands, when they are solely touched on the unaffected hand (i.e., synchiria). Using a novel assessment tool, we investigated whether in stroke patients with apparent intact tactile awareness on standard evaluation, tactile extinction might be possibly masked by phantom (synchiric) sensations (i.e., elicited by ipsilesional stimulation) arising exclusively during Double Simultaneous Stimulation (DSS). Patients with right (n = 17) and left (n = 8) hemisphere lesions and age-matched healthy controls (n = 13) were tested with the Tactile Quadrant Stimulation test, consisting in delivering unilateral or bilateral touches to one of four quadrants, identified on the participants' hands. In DSS trials, stimuli were applied to asymmetric quadrants. Participants reported the side(s) and then pointed to the site(s) of stimulation. We found that, with the exception of one patient who showed tactile extinction, about 50% of patients with overall intact tactile perception on classical evaluation, although reporting two stimuli in DSS, failed in pointing to the correct contralesional stimulated site. They reported the felt sensation in positions that corresponded to the ipsilesional stimulated sites. Thus apparent detections of contralesional touches in DSS were accounted for by 'phantom' sensations of ipsilesional stimulation that masked unawareness of contralesional touches when classic assessment was applied. Preliminary lesion analyses indicate that the symptom was associated with damage to structures often affected in tactile extinction. These findings, while unveiling important underestimation of the patients' neurological condition, provide a framework for investigating bihemispheric contributions to altered tactile perception following stroke.
理解脑损伤后触觉障碍的性质对于理解大脑如何构建感觉意识至关重要。中风患者,如果同时被触摸未受影响的手(即触觉消失),可能会不知道受影响的手被触摸。更罕见的是,当他们仅被未受影响的手触摸时,他们会感觉到两只手上的触摸(即联觉)。使用一种新的评估工具,我们研究了在标准评估中明显具有完整触觉意识的中风患者中,触觉缺失是否可能被幻觉(联觉)感觉(即由同侧刺激引起)掩盖,这些感觉仅在双同时刺激(DSS)期间出现。我们对右侧(n=17)和左侧(n=8)半球病变的患者以及年龄匹配的健康对照组(n=13)进行了触觉象限刺激测试,该测试包括单侧或双侧触摸参与者手部的四个象限中的一个。在 DSS 试验中,刺激施加于不对称的象限。参与者报告了侧(侧),然后指向刺激的部位。我们发现,除了一名患者出现触觉缺失外,约有 50%的患者在经典评估中整体触觉感知完整,尽管在 DSS 中报告了两个刺激,但在指向正确的对侧刺激部位时却失败了。他们报告了感觉到的感觉在与同侧刺激部位相对应的位置。因此,在 DSS 中明显检测到对侧触摸是由同侧刺激的“幻觉”感觉引起的,当应用经典评估时,这些感觉掩盖了对侧触摸的无意识。初步的病变分析表明,该症状与通常在触觉缺失中受影响的结构的损伤有关。这些发现虽然揭示了对患者神经状况的重要低估,但为研究中风后改变的触觉感知的双半球贡献提供了框架。