Nociceptive and non-nociceptive sub-regions in the human secondary somatosensory cortex: a MEG study using fMRI constraints
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2005
Abstract:
Previous evidence from functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
has shown that a painful galvanic stimulation mainly activates a
posterior sub-region in the secondary somatosensory cortex (SII),
whereas a non-painful sensory stimulation mainly activates an anterior
sub-region of SII [Ferretti, A., Babiloni, C., Del Gratta, C., Caulo, M.,
Tartaro, A., Bonomo, L., Rossini, P.M., Romani, G.L., 2003. Functional
topography of the secondary somatosensory cortex for non-painful and
painful stimuli: an fMRI study. Neuroimage 20 (3), 1625–1638.]. The
present study, combining fMRI with magnetoencephalographic (MEG)
findings, assessed the working hypothesis that the activity of such a
posterior SII sub-region is characterized by an amplitude and temporal
evolution in line with the bilateral functional organization of nociceptive
systems. Somatosensory evoked magnetic fields (SEFs) recordings
after alvanic median nerve stimulation were obtained from the same
sample of subjects previously examined with fMRI [Ferretti, A.,
Babiloni, C., Del Gratta, C., Caulo, M., Tartaro, A., Bonomo, L.,
Rossini, P.M., Romani, G.L., 2003. Functional topography of the
secondary somatosensory cortex for non-painful and painful stimuli:
an fMRI study. Neuroimage 20 (3), 1625–1638.]. Constraints for dipole
source localizations obtained from MEG recordings were applied
according to fMRI activations, namely, at the posterior and the
anterior SII sub-regions. It was shown that, after painful stimulation,
the two posterior SII sub-regions of the contralateral and ipsilateral
hemispheres were characterized by dipole sources with similar
amplitudes and latencies. In contrast, the activity of anterior SII subregions
showed statistically significant differences in amplitude and
latency during both non-painful and painful stimulation conditions. In
the contralateral hemisphere, the source activity was greater in
amplitude and shorter in latency with respect to the ipsilateral. Finally, painful stimuli evoked a response from the posterior sub-regions
peaking significantly earlier than from the anterior sub-regions. These
results suggested that both ipsi and contra posterior SII sub-regions
process painful stimuli in parallel, while the anterior SII sub-regions
might play an integrative role in the processing of somatosensory
stimuli.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Torquati, K; Pizzella, Vittorio; Babiloni, C; DEL GRATTA, Cosimo; DELLA PENNA, Stefania; Ferretti, Antonio; Franciotti, Raffaella; Rossini, Pm; Romani, Gian Luca
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