Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland 20814.
Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine, Bethesda, Maryland 20817.
J Neurosci. 2024 Jan 3;44(1):e1051232024. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1051-23.2023.
Despite the increasing incidence and prevalence of amputation across the globe, individuals with acquired limb loss continue to struggle with functional recovery and chronic pain. A more complete understanding of the motor and sensory remodeling of the peripheral and central nervous system that occurs postamputation may help advance clinical interventions to improve the quality of life for individuals with acquired limb loss. The purpose of this article is to first provide background clinical context on individuals with acquired limb loss and then to provide a comprehensive review of the known motor and sensory neural adaptations from both animal models and human clinical trials. Finally, the article bridges the gap between basic science researchers and clinicians that treat individuals with limb loss by explaining how current clinical treatments may restore function and modulate phantom limb pain using the underlying neural adaptations described above. This review should encourage the further development of novel treatments with known neurological targets to improve the recovery of individuals postamputation. In the United States, 1.6 million people live with limb loss; this number is expected to more than double by 2050. Improved surgical procedures enhance recovery, and new prosthetics and neural interfaces can replace missing limbs with those that communicate bidirectionally with the brain. These advances have been fairly successful, but still most patients experience persistent problems like phantom limb pain, and others discontinue prostheses instead of learning to use them daily. These problematic patient outcomes may be due in part to the lack of consensus among basic and clinical researchers regarding the plasticity mechanisms that occur in the brain after amputation injuries. Here we review results from clinical and animal model studies to bridge this clinical-basic science gap.
尽管全球截肢的发病率和患病率不断上升,但肢体丧失者在功能恢复和慢性疼痛方面仍面临困难。更全面地了解截肢后周围和中枢神经系统的运动和感觉重塑,可能有助于推进临床干预措施,提高肢体丧失者的生活质量。本文的目的首先是提供有关肢体丧失者的临床背景知识,然后全面回顾动物模型和人体临床试验中已知的运动和感觉神经适应。最后,本文通过解释当前的临床治疗方法如何利用上述潜在的神经适应来恢复功能和调节幻肢痛,弥合了基础科学研究人员和治疗肢体丧失者的临床医生之间的差距。这篇综述应该鼓励进一步开发具有已知神经靶点的新治疗方法,以改善截肢后个体的恢复。在美国,有 160 万人肢体丧失;到 2050 年,这个数字预计将增加一倍以上。改进的手术程序增强了恢复能力,新的假肢和神经接口可以用与大脑双向通信的假肢代替缺失的肢体。这些进展相当成功,但大多数患者仍会持续出现幻肢痛等问题,而其他患者则停止使用假肢,而不是学习每天使用。这些有问题的患者结果可能部分归因于基础和临床研究人员之间缺乏共识,即截肢损伤后大脑中发生的可塑性机制。在这里,我们回顾临床和动物模型研究的结果,以弥合这一临床-基础科学差距。