Characterizing biased visuospatial perception in complex regional pain syndrome

Author:

Filbrich Lieve12ORCID,Kuzminova Avgustina1,Molitor Victoria1,Verfaille Charlotte1,Mouraux Dominique34,Berquin Anne15,Barbier Olivier56,Libouton Xavier56,Legrain Valéry127

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Neuroscience (IONS) Université catholique de Louvain Brussels Belgium

2. Psychological Sciences Research Institute (IPSY) Université catholique de Louvain Louvain‐la‐Neuve Belgium

3. Faculty of Motor Sciences Université libre de Bruxelles Brussels Belgium

4. University Hospital Erasme Brussels Belgium

5. University Hospital Saint‐Luc Brussels Belgium

6. Institute of Experimental and Clinical Research Université catholique de Louvain Brussels Belgium

7. Louvain Bionics Université catholique de Louvain Louvain‐la‐Neuve Belgium

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPatients suffering from complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) are increasingly shown to be affected by cognitive difficulties. While these cognitive symptoms were initially described as limited to the perception, representation and use of the body, that is, the somatic space, they were recently shown to also extend to the perception of extra‐somatic space. CRPS patients seem indeed to pay less attention to visual stimuli occurring in the same side of space as their affected limb and especially those occurring close to that limb. The aim of the present study was to more precisely characterize these visuospatial biases, by investigating whether they may be dependent on the visually perceived proximity between the visual stimuli and the affected limb.MethodsUpper‐limb CRPS patients and matched control participants performed temporal order judgements on visual stimuli, one presented in either side of space, while they could either see their hands near the visual stimuli or not.ResultsVisuospatial biases were not modulated by the availability of visual feedback about the hands. However, secondary analyses revealed that these biases depended on the type of rehabilitation program that the patients followed: whereas patients who did not follow any specific program presented significant biases to the detriment of visual stimuli in the affected side of space, patients who did follow a CRPS‐specialized program did not.ConclusionsPatients' cognitive strategies will be important to consider when studying inter‐individual differences in the cognitive symptomatology and associated cognitive‐based rehabilitation procedures in CRPS.SignificanceThe existence of biases in visuospatial perception in Complex Regional Pain Syndrome has been reported but not always systematically replicated. We show that these biases might depend on the type of general rehabilitation program that the patients follow. Patients’ individual cognitive strategies will be important to consider when studying the cognitive symptomatology of CRPS.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

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