1. Acupuncture Evoked Response in Contralateral Somatosensory Cortex Reflects Peripheral Nerve Pathology of Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
- Author
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Cristina Malatesta, Jessica Gerber, Kyungmo Park, Pia Mezzacappa, Claire McManus, Stephen Cina, Alexandra Libby, Yumi Maeda, Jieun Kim, Joseph Audette, Norman W. Kettner, Jaehyun Im, Leslie R. Morse, Vitaly Napadow, and Jeungchan Lee
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Electroacupuncture ,Secondary somatosensory cortex ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Chronic pain ,Original Articles ,medicine.disease ,Somatosensory system ,Median nerve ,Surgery ,Complementary and alternative medicine ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Acupuncture ,Carpal tunnel syndrome ,business ,Insula - Abstract
Most neuroimaging studies exploring brain response to different acupoints have been performed in healthy adults.The aim of this study was to compare brain responses to acupuncture at local versus distal acupoints in patients with carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS), who have chronic pain, versus healthy controls (HC) and correlate these responses with median nerve function.Brain response to electroacupuncture (EA; 2Hz) was evaluated with event-related functional MRI (fMRI) in patients with CTS (Brain response in both groups and acupoints included activation of the bilateral secondary somatosensory cortex (S2) and insula, and the contralesional primary somatosensory cortex (cS1). Deactivation was noted in ipsilesional primary somatosensory cortex (S1). A significant difference between local and distal acupoints was found in cS1 for HC, but not CTS. Furthermore, cS1 activation by EA at local acupoints was negatively correlated with median nerve peak sensory latency in HC, but was positively correlated in CTS. No correlation was found for EA at distal acupoints for either group.Brain response to EA differs between CTS and HC and, for local acupoint stimulation, is associated with median nerve function, reflecting the peripheral nerve pathophysiology of CTS.
- Published
- 2013