Preliminary evidence for training-induced changes of morphology and phantom limb pain

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Abstract

The aim of this study was to investigate whether a special prosthetic training in phantom limb pain patients aimed at increasing the functional use of the prosthesis leads to neural morphological plasticity of brain structures and a reduction in phantom limb pain. For chronic pain disorders, it was shown that morphological alterations due to pain might become at least partially reversed by pain therapies. Phantomlimb pain is a chronic pain disorder that is frequently followed by neural plasticity of anatomical brain structures. In our study, 10 patients with amputation of the upper limb participated in a two-week training with a myoelectric prosthesis with somatosensory feedback. Grip strength was fed back with electrocutaneous stimulus patterns applied to the stump. Phantom limb pain was assessedbefore andafter the two-week training. Similarly, two T1 weightedMRI scans were conducted for longitudinal thickness analyses of cortical brain structures. As result of this treatment, patients experienced a reduction in phantomlimb pain and a gain in prosthesis functionality. Furthermore, we found a change of cortical thickness in small brain areas in the visual stream and the post-central gyrus ipsilateral to the amputation indicating morphological alterations in brain areas involved in vision and pain processing.

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Preißler, S., Thielemann, D., Dietrich, C., Hofmann, G. O., Miltner, W. H. R., & Weiss, T. (2017). Preliminary evidence for training-induced changes of morphology and phantom limb pain. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 11. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2017.00319

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