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The roles of the somatosensory cortices in the perception of noxious and innocuous stimuli

Posted on:2011-10-02Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Universite de Montreal (Canada)Candidate:Duerden, Emma GailFull Text:PDF
GTID:1444390002458883Subject:Biology
Abstract/Summary:
Early anatomical and single-unit recording studies established a crucial role for the primary and secondary somatosensory cortices (SI & SII) in processing somatosensory information. However, recent advances in brain imaging and analysis techniques have called into question their role in somatosensation. Findings from this recent research are relevant to the study of the reorganizational changes occurring in the somatosensory cortices that have been causally linked to the genesis of pain in amputee patients. These patients continue to perceive and experience pain in the absent limb, which is usually referred to as phantom-limb pain; but little research on this phenomenon has focused on other regions outside SI, and further study is needed. The present series of experiments involve an exploration of the roles of the somatosensory cortices in the perception of noxious and innocuous tactile stimuli in healthy volunteers and patients with phantom-limb pain.;The role of the somatosensory cortices in the conscious perception of brief warm stimuli was explored in Chapter 4 using functional magnetic resonance imaging, where noxious and innocuous thermal stimuli were counterbalanced within the experimental protocol. This procedure allowed a gating of the somatosensory system in which the perception of warm stimuli was attenuated by painful stimuli, thus permitting the comparison of detected with undetected stimuli. Results showed that detected warm stimuli significantly activated SI and SII.;It is also possible to draw insight regarding which cortical regions subserve somatosensory processing and its organization by clinical assessment of amputee patients, who demonstrate altered somatosensation. To date, few studies have explored the relationship between referred sensations to the phantom and cortical reorganization. In Chapter 5 we hypothesized that referred sensations to phantom limbs are a perceptual correlates of a somatotopic reorganization of sensory representations. Derangements in referred sensations can give clues to the regions involved in referred sensations genesis. Thus, a quantitative sensory testing protocol was administered to a group of phantom-limb pain patients. Results showed that, contrary to previous reports, referred sensations to the phantom differed greatly based on the type and intensity of the tactile stimuli applied to the body, with no evidence of a spatially localized pattern. Previous reports of referred sensations have solely focused on plastic changes in SI. However, the present results suggest that other cortical regions with bilateral receptive fields also undergo reorganizational changes in response to deafferentation.;These studies present an emerging picture of the cortical regions involved in the perception of somatosensory stimuli, which include SI and SII, as well as the insula. Findings are relevant to our understanding of the neural correlates of conscious perception of somatosensation and the formation of the mental representation of stimuli applied to the body.;The first experimental study in Chapter 3 is a meta-analytic review of neuroimaging studies examining noxious stimuli evoked activation in healthy volunteers. In comparison to previous reviews that have merely reported the prevalence of pain-related activation, the present study yields quantitative probabilistic maps that permit localization of the likelihood of obtaining activation in response to noxious stimuli within any brain region.;Key words: Pain, warm, touch, neuroimaging, human.
Keywords/Search Tags:Stimuli, Somatosensory cortices, Noxious, Role, Perception, Referred sensations, Pain, Warm
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