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Journal ArticleDOI

Deactivation and reactivation of somatosensory cortex after dorsal spinal cord injury

Neeraj Jain, +2 more
- 03 Apr 1997 - 
- Vol. 386, Iss: 6624, pp 495-498
TLDR
Sensory stimuli to the body are conveyed by the spinal cord to the primary somatosensory cortex, which is highly dependent on dorsal spinal column inputs, and other spinal pathways do not substitute for the dorsal columns even after injury.
Abstract
Sensory stimuli to the body are conveyed by the spinal cord to the primary somatosensory cortex. It has long been thought that dorsal column afferents of the spinal cord represent the main pathway for these signals, but the physiological and behavioural consequences of cutting the dorsal column have been reported to range from mild and transitory to marked. We have re-examined this issue by sectioning the dorsal columns in the cervical region and recording the responses to hand stimulation in the contralateral primary somatosensory cortex (area 3b). Following a complete section of the dorsal columns, neurons in area 3b become immediately and perhaps permanently unresponsive to hand stimulation. Following a partial section, the remaining dorsal column afferents continue to activate neurons within their normal cortical target territories, but after five or more weeks the area of activation is greatly expanded. After prolonged recovery periods of six months or more, the deprived hand territory becomes responsive to inputs from the face (which are unaffected by spinal cord section). Thus, area 3b of somatosensory cortex is highly dependent on dorsal spinal column inputs, and other spinal pathways do not substitute for the dorsal columns even after injury.

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Citations
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Plasticity of motor systems after incomplete spinal cord injury

TL;DR: Functional and anatomical evidence exists that spontaneous plasticity can be potentiated by activity, as well as by specific experimental manipulations, which prepare the way to a better understanding of rehabilitation treatments and to the development of new approaches to treat spinal cord injury.
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From basics to clinical: a comprehensive review on spinal cord injury.

TL;DR: An extensive overview of SCI research, as well as its clinical component, is provided, covering areas from physiology and anatomy of the spinal cord, neuropathology of the SCI, current clinical options, neuronal plasticity after SCI and a variety of promising neuroprotective, cell-based and combinatorial therapeutic approaches that have recently moved, or are close to clinical testing.
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Effects of Regional Anesthesia on Phantom Limb Pain Are Mirrored in Changes in Cortical Reorganization

TL;DR: Findings suggest that cortical reorganization and phantom limb pain might have a causal relationship and methods designed to alter corticalorganization should be examined for their efficacy in the treatment of phantom limbPain.
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Large-Scale Sprouting of Cortical Connections After Peripheral Injury in Adult Macaque Monkeys

TL;DR: The growth of intracortical but not thalamocortical connections could account for much of the reorganization of the sensory maps in cortex in macaque monkeys with long-standing, accidental trauma to a forelimb.
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Topographic Maps are Fundamental to Sensory Processing

TL;DR: Topographic maps provide an especially suitable substrate for the common spatiotemporal computations for neural circuits and aspects of perception suggest the functional importance of topographic maps.
References
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