Differences in somatosensory processing due to dominant hemispheric motor impairment in cerebral palsy
Fecha
2014Resumen
Background: Although cerebral palsy (CP) is usually defined as a group of permanent motor disorders due to
non-progressive disturbances in the developing fetal or infant brain, recent research has shown that CP individuals
are also characterized by altered somatosensory perception, increased pain and abnormal activation of cortical
somatosensory areas. The present study was aimed to examine hemispheric differences on somatosensory brain
processing in individuals with bilateral CP and lateralized motor impairments compared with healthy controls.
Nine CP individuals with left-dominant motor impairments (LMI) (age range 5–28 yrs), nine CP individuals with
right-dominant motor impairments (RMI) (age range 7–29 yrs), and 12 healthy controls (age range 5–30 yrs)
participated in the study. Proprioception, touch and pain thresholds, as well as somatosensory evoked potentials
(SEP) elicited by tactile stimulation of right and left lips and thumbs were compared.
Results: Pain sensitivity was higher, and lip stimulation elicited greater beta power and more symmetrical SEP
amplitudes in individuals with CP than in healthy controls. In addition, although there was no significant differences
between individuals with RMI and LMI on pain or touch sensitivity, lip and thumb stimulation elicited smaller beta
power and more symmetrical SEP amplitudes in individuals with LMI than with RMI.
Conclusions: Our data revealed that brain processing of somatosensory stimulation was abnormal in CP
individuals. Moreover, this processing was different depending if they presented right- or left-dominant motor impairments, suggesting that different mechanisms of sensorimotor reorganization should be involved in CP depending on dominant side of motor impairment.