Microstructural integrity of corticospinal and medial lemniscus tracts: insights from diffusion tensor tractography of right-hand amputees

Author:

Peng Huiling1,Cirstea Carmen M.2,Kaufman Christina L.3,Frey Scott H.24

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

2. Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri

3. Christine M. Kleinert Institute, Louisville, Kentucky

4. Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri

Abstract

Reductions in sensory and motor activity following unilateral upper limb amputation during adulthood are associated with widespread, activity-dependent reorganization of the gray matter and white matter through the central nervous system. Likewise, in cases of congenital limb absence there is evidence that limited afferent or efferent activity affects the structural integrity of white matter pathways serving the affected side. Evidence that the structural integrity of mature sensory and motor tracts controlling the lost upper limb exhibits similar activity dependence is, however, sparse and inconsistent. Here we used diffusion tensor tractography to test whether amputation of the dominant right hand during adulthood ( n = 16) alters the microstructural integrity of the major sensory (medial lemniscus, ML) and motor (corticospinal tract, CST) pathways controlling missing hand function. Consistent with prior findings, healthy control subjects ( n = 27) exhibited higher fractional anisotropy (FA), an index of white matter microstructural integrity, within dominant left CST and nondominant right ML. Critically, in contrast to what might be expected if the microstructural organization of these tracts is activity dependent, these asymmetries persisted in amputees. Moreover, we failed to detect any differences in dominant left ML or CST between healthy control subjects and amputees. Our results are consistent with these white matter tracts being robust to changes in activity once mature or that continued use of the residual limb (in a compensatory fashion or with prosthesis) provides stimulation sufficient to maintain tract integrity. NEW & NOTEWORTHY We report that unilateral hand amputation in adults has no significant effects on the structure of major sensory or motor pathways contralateral to the amputation. Our results are consistent with the organization of these white matter tracts being robust to changes in activity once mature or that continued use of the residual limb (with or without a prosthesis) provides stimulation sufficient to maintain tract integrity.

Funder

DOD | Medical Research and Materiel Command, U.S. Army Medical Department (U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command)

HHS | NIH | National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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