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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 82 No. 6 December 1999, pp. 3204-3212
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
1Department of Neurosurgery, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland 21287-7713; and 2Graduate Program in Physical Therapy, School of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, California
Lenz, Fred A. and
Nancy N. Byl.
Reorganization in the Cutaneous Core of the Human Thalamic
Principal Somatic Sensory Nucleus (Ventral Caudal) in Patients With
Dystonia. J. Neurophysiol. 82: 3204-3212, 1999. A wide range of observations suggest that sensory inputs play
a significant role in dystonia. For example, the map of the hand
representation in the primary sensory cortex (area 3b) is altered in
monkeys with dystonia-like movements resulting from overtraining in a
gripping task. We investigated whether similar reorganization occurs in
the somatic sensory thalamus of patients with dystonia (dystonia
patients). We studied recordings of neuronal activity and
microstimulation-evoked responses from the cutaneous core of the human
principal somatic sensory nucleus (ventral caudal, Vc) of 11 dystonia
patients who underwent stereotactic thalamotomy. Fifteen patients with
essential tremor who underwent similar procedures were used as
controls. The cutaneous core of Vc was defined as the part of the
cellular thalamic region where the majority of cells had receptive
fields (RFs) to innocuous cutaneous stimuli. The proportion of RFs
including multiple parts of the body was greater in dystonia patients
(29%) than in patients with essential tremor (11%). Similarly, the
percentage of projected fields (PFs) including multiple body parts was
higher in dystonia patients (71%) than in patients with essential
tremor (41%). A match at a thalamic site was said to occur if the RF
and PF at that site included a body part in common. Such matches were
significantly less prevalent in dystonia patients (33%) than in
patients with essential tremor (58%). The average length of the
trajectory where the PF included a consistent, cutaneous RF was
significantly longer in patients with dystonia than in control patients
with essential tremor. The findings of sensory reorganization in Vc
thalamus are congruent with those reported in the somatic sensory
cortex of monkeys with dystonia-like movements resulting from
overtraining in a gripping task.
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