The Neuroanatomy of Poststroke Subjective Sensory Hypersensitivity

Author:

Thielen Hella1,Tuts Nora1,Lafosse Christophe2,Gillebert Céline Raymond13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Brain and Cognition, Leuven Brain Institute, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium

2. RevArte Rehabilitation Hospital, Edegem, Belgium

3. TRACE, Centre for Translational Psychological Research, KU Leuven—Hospital East–Limbourgh, Genk, Belgium

Abstract

Background: Although subjective sensory hypersensitivity is prevalent after stroke, it is rarely recognized by health care providers, and its neural mechanisms are largely unknown. Objective: To investigate the neuroanatomy of poststroke subjective sensory hypersensitivity as well as the sensory modalities in which subjective sensory hypersensitivity can occur by conducting both a systematic literature review and a multiple case study of patients with subjective sensory hypersensitivity. Method: For the systematic review, we searched three databases (Web of Science, PubMed, and Scopus) for empirical articles discussing the neuroanatomy of poststroke subjective sensory hypersensitivity in humans. We assessed the methodological quality of the included studies using the case reports critical appraisal tool and summarized the results using a qualitative synthesis. For the multiple case study, we administered a patient-friendly sensory sensitivity questionnaire to three individuals with a subacute right-hemispheric stroke and a matched control group and delineated brain lesions on a clinical brain scan. Results: Our systematic literature search resulted in four studies (describing eight stroke patients), all of which linked poststroke subjective sensory hypersensitivity to insular lesions. The results of our multiple case study indicated that all three stroke patients reported an atypically high sensitivity to different sensory modalities. These patients’ lesions overlapped with the right anterior insula, the claustrum, and the Rolandic operculum. Conclusion: Both our systematic literature review and our multiple case study provide preliminary evidence for a role of the insula in poststroke subjective sensory hypersensitivity and suggest that poststroke subjective sensory hypersensitivity can occur in different sensory modalities.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Cognitive Neuroscience,General Medicine,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology

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