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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Intracortical and Thalamocortical Connections of the Hand and Face Representations in Somatosensory Area 3b of Macaque Monkeys and Effects of Chronic Spinal Cord Injuries.

Prem Chand, +1 more
- 30 Sep 2015 - 
- Vol. 35, Iss: 39, pp 13475-13486
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TLDR
It is shown that reorganization of primary somatosensory area 3b is not accompanied with either an increase in intrinsic cortical connections between the hand and face representations, or any change in thalamocortical inputs to these areas.
Abstract
Brains of adult monkeys with chronic lesions of dorsal columns of spinal cord at cervical levels undergo large-scale reorganization. Reorganization results in expansion of intact chin inputs, which reactivate neurons in the deafferented hand representation in the primary somatosensory cortex (area 3b), ventroposterior nucleus of the thalamus and cuneate nucleus of the brainstem. A likely contributing mechanism for this large-scale plasticity is sprouting of axons across the hand-face border. Here we determined whether such sprouting takes place in area 3b. We first determined the extent of intrinsic corticocortical connectivity between the hand and the face representations in normal area 3b. Small amounts of neuroanatomical tracers were injected in these representations close to the electrophysiologically determined hand-face border. Locations of the labeled neurons were mapped with respect to the detailed electrophysiological somatotopic maps and histologically determined hand-face border revealed in sections of the flattened cortex stained for myelin. Results show that intracortical projections across the hand-face border are few. In monkeys with chronic unilateral lesions of the dorsal columns and expanded chin representation, connections across the hand-face border were not different compared with normal monkeys. Thalamocortical connections from the hand and face representations in the ventroposterior nucleus to area 3b also remained unaltered after injury. The results show that sprouting of intrinsic connections in area 3b or the thalamocortical inputs does not contribute to large-scale cortical plasticity. Significance statement: Long-term injuries to dorsal spinal cord in adult primates result in large-scale somatotopic reorganization due to which chin inputs expand into the deafferented hand region. Reorganization takes place in multiple cortical areas, and thalamic and medullary nuclei. To what extent this brain reorganization due to dorsal column injuries is related to axonal sprouting is not known. Here we show that reorganization of primary somatosensory area 3b is not accompanied with either an increase in intrinsic cortical connections between the hand and face representations, or any change in thalamocortical inputs to these areas. Axonal sprouting that causes reorganization likely takes place at subthalamic levels.

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Citations
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Body topography parcellates human sensory and motor cortex

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Cortical Reorganization of Sensorimotor Systems and the Role of Intracortical Circuits After Spinal Cord Injury

TL;DR: This review focuses on the reorganization of cortical networks observed after injury and posits a role of intracortical circuits in recovery.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Rapid axonal sprouting and pruning accompany functional reorganization in primary visual cortex.

TL;DR: The axonal restructuring recapitulates the pattern of exuberance and pruning seen in early development and correlates well with the functional changes following retinal lesions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Growth of new brainstem connections in adult monkeys with massive sensory loss.

TL;DR: The face afferents from the trigeminal nucleus of the brainstem sprout and grow into the cuneate nucleus in adult monkeys after lesions of the dorsal columns of the spinal cord or therapeutic amputation of an arm, which may underlie the large-scale expansion of the face representation into the hand region of somatosensory cortex that follows such deafferentations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cortical and subcortical plasticity in the brains of humans, primates, and rats after damage to sensory afferents in the dorsal columns of the spinal cord

TL;DR: The anatomical, physiological and behavioral changes that take place in response to injury-induced plasticity after damage to the dorsal column pathway in rats and monkeys are discussed and functional collateral sprouting has been promoted by the post-lesion digestion of the perineuronal net in the cuneate nucleus.
Journal ArticleDOI

Immediate and simultaneous sensory reorganization at cortical and subcortical levels of the somatosensory system

TL;DR: Recordings of extracellular activity of neurons in the primary somatosensory cortex, ventral posterior medial nucleus of the thalamus, and trigeminal brainstem complex of adult rats demonstrate that peripheral sensory deafferentation triggers a system-wide reorganization, and suggest that the spatiotemporal attributes of cortical plasticity are paralleled by subcortical reorganization.
Journal ArticleDOI

The somatotopic organization of the ventroposterior thalamus of the squirrel monkey, Saimiri sciureus.

TL;DR: It is hypothesized that the disruptions, regions of isorepresentation, and regions of gradual change result from the thickening, splitting, and folding of a two‐dimensional representation of the skin surface to occupy a three‐dimensional volume.
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