Abstract

Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) is a chronic, debilitating pain condition that usually arises after trauma to a limb, but its precise etiology remains elusive. Novel clinical signs based on body perceptual disturbances have been reported, but their pathophysiological mechanisms remain poorly understood. Investigators have used functional neuroimaging techniques (including MEG, EEG, fMRI, and PET) to study changes mainly within the somatosensory and motor cortices. Here, we provide a focused review of the neuroimaging research findings that have generated insights into the potential neurocognitive and neuroplastic mechanisms underlying perceptual disturbances in CRPS. Neuroimaging findings, particularly with regard to somatosensory processing, have been promising but limited by a number of technique-specific factors (such as the complexity of neuroimaging investigations, poor spatial resolution of EEG/MEG, and use of modeling procedures that do not draw causal inferences) and more general factors including small samples sizes and poorly characterized patients. These factors have led to an underappreciation of the potential heterogeneity of pathophysiology that may underlie variable clinical presentation in CRPS. Also, until now, neurological deficits have been predominantly investigated separately from perceptual and cognitive disturbances. Here, we highlight the need to identify neurocognitive phenotypes of patients with CRPS that are underpinned by causal explanations for perceptual disturbances. We suggest that a combination of larger cohorts, patient phenotyping, the use of both high temporal, and spatial resolution neuroimaging methods, and the identification of simplified biomarkers is likely to be the most fruitful approach to identifying neurocognitive phenotypes in CRPS. Based on our review, we explain how such phenotypes could be characterized in terms of hierarchical models of perception and corresponding disturbances in recurrent processing involving the somatosensory, salience and executive brain networks. We also draw attention to complementary neurological factors that may explain some CRPS symptoms, including the possibility of central neuroinflammation and neuronal atrophy, and how these phenomena may overlap but be partially separable from neurocognitive deficits.

Highlights

  • Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS) is a chronic, debilitating pain condition that usually arises after trauma to a limb

  • While most studies on the functioning of the cerebral cortex in Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) have largely focused on early somatosensory processing, it is known that intact somatosensory awareness depends on the late cognitive stages of neuronal processing (Auksztulewicz and Blankenburg, 2013; Adhikari et al, 2014) and that neurological disturbances of the body scheme can be caused by the frontal abnormalities (Weijers et al, 2013)

  • This view is supported by functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) evidence of greater functional connectivity patterns between the post-central gyrus and prefrontal, cingulate and thalamic regions to cold allodynia in pediatric patients with CRPS (Linnman et al, 2013) compared to healthy controls, which persisted after recovery

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Summary

Neurocognitive and Neuroplastic Mechanisms of Novel Clinical Signs in CRPS

Anoop Kuttikat , Valdas Noreika , Nicholas Shenker , Srivas Chennu2,3 , Tristan Bekinschtein and Christopher Andrew Brown5*. Neuroimaging findings, with regard to somatosensory processing, have been promising but limited by a number of technique-specific factors (such as the complexity of neuroimaging investigations, poor spatial resolution of EEG/MEG, and use of modeling procedures that do not draw causal inferences) and more general factors including small samples sizes and poorly characterized patients. These factors have led to an underappreciation of the potential heterogeneity of pathophysiology that may underlie variable clinical presentation in CRPS.

INTRODUCTION
NEUROIMAGING OF SOMATOSENSORY REPRESENTATIONS IN CRPS
SOMATOSENSORY SPATIAL REPRESENTATIONS
THE CHALLENGE OF HETEROGENEITY
CORTICAL PLASTICITY
NEUROCOGNITIVE MODELS OF SOMATOSENSORY PERCEPTION
MODELING RECURRENT CONNECTIONS IN THE SOMATOSENSORY SYSTEM
NEUROCOGNITIVE MECHANISMS OF HEMISPATIAL NEGLECT IN CRPS
NEUROCOGNITIVE PHENOTYPES
CONCLUSION
Findings
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
Full Text
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