Insula and sensory insular cortex and somatosensory control in patients with insular stroke

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Insula and sensory insular cortex and somatosensory control in patients with insular stroke. / Baier, B; zu Eulenburg, P; Geber, C; Rohde, F; Rolke, R; Maihöfner, C; Birklein, F; Dieterich, M.

in: EUR J PAIN, Jahrgang 18, Nr. 10, 11.2014, S. 1385-93.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Baier, B, zu Eulenburg, P, Geber, C, Rohde, F, Rolke, R, Maihöfner, C, Birklein, F & Dieterich, M 2014, 'Insula and sensory insular cortex and somatosensory control in patients with insular stroke', EUR J PAIN, Jg. 18, Nr. 10, S. 1385-93. https://doi.org/10.1002/j.1532-2149.2014.501.x

APA

Baier, B., zu Eulenburg, P., Geber, C., Rohde, F., Rolke, R., Maihöfner, C., Birklein, F., & Dieterich, M. (2014). Insula and sensory insular cortex and somatosensory control in patients with insular stroke. EUR J PAIN, 18(10), 1385-93. https://doi.org/10.1002/j.1532-2149.2014.501.x

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{6c02f9057a3a4036ba2f71f12e5b7508,
title = "Insula and sensory insular cortex and somatosensory control in patients with insular stroke",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: In functional imaging studies, the insular cortex (IC) has been identified as an essential part of the processing of a whole spectrum of multimodal sensory input. However, there are no lesion studies including a sufficient number of patients, which would reinforce the functional imaging data obtained from healthy subjects. Such lesion studies should examine how damage to the IC affects sensory perception. We chose acute stroke patients with lesions affecting the IC in order to fill this gap.METHODS: A comprehensive sensory profiling by applying a quantitative sensory testing protocol was performed and a voxel-lesion behaviour mapping analysis in 24 patients with acute unilateral cortical damage was applied.RESULTS: Our data demonstrate that patients with lesions of the posterior IC have deficits in temperature perception, but did not show other sensory deficits such as hot or cold pain perception associated with specific lesion locations.CONCLUSION: Our data allow the conclusion that the posterior IC may represent the major region responsible for encoding warm and cold perception in the brain. To what extent focal IC lesions may also impair pain processing or induce post-stroke pain has to be addressed in future studies including more patients.",
keywords = "Aged, Brain Mapping, Cerebral Cortex, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Hypesthesia, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Pain Perception, Perception, Somatosensory Cortex, Stroke, Thermosensing, Touch Perception, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't",
author = "B Baier and {zu Eulenburg}, P and C Geber and F Rohde and R Rolke and C Maih{\"o}fner and F Birklein and M Dieterich",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2014 European Pain Federation - EFIC{\textregistered}",
year = "2014",
month = nov,
doi = "10.1002/j.1532-2149.2014.501.x",
language = "English",
volume = "18",
pages = "1385--93",
journal = "EUR J PAIN",
issn = "1090-3801",
publisher = "W.B. Saunders Ltd",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Insula and sensory insular cortex and somatosensory control in patients with insular stroke

AU - Baier, B

AU - zu Eulenburg, P

AU - Geber, C

AU - Rohde, F

AU - Rolke, R

AU - Maihöfner, C

AU - Birklein, F

AU - Dieterich, M

N1 - © 2014 European Pain Federation - EFIC®

PY - 2014/11

Y1 - 2014/11

N2 - BACKGROUND: In functional imaging studies, the insular cortex (IC) has been identified as an essential part of the processing of a whole spectrum of multimodal sensory input. However, there are no lesion studies including a sufficient number of patients, which would reinforce the functional imaging data obtained from healthy subjects. Such lesion studies should examine how damage to the IC affects sensory perception. We chose acute stroke patients with lesions affecting the IC in order to fill this gap.METHODS: A comprehensive sensory profiling by applying a quantitative sensory testing protocol was performed and a voxel-lesion behaviour mapping analysis in 24 patients with acute unilateral cortical damage was applied.RESULTS: Our data demonstrate that patients with lesions of the posterior IC have deficits in temperature perception, but did not show other sensory deficits such as hot or cold pain perception associated with specific lesion locations.CONCLUSION: Our data allow the conclusion that the posterior IC may represent the major region responsible for encoding warm and cold perception in the brain. To what extent focal IC lesions may also impair pain processing or induce post-stroke pain has to be addressed in future studies including more patients.

AB - BACKGROUND: In functional imaging studies, the insular cortex (IC) has been identified as an essential part of the processing of a whole spectrum of multimodal sensory input. However, there are no lesion studies including a sufficient number of patients, which would reinforce the functional imaging data obtained from healthy subjects. Such lesion studies should examine how damage to the IC affects sensory perception. We chose acute stroke patients with lesions affecting the IC in order to fill this gap.METHODS: A comprehensive sensory profiling by applying a quantitative sensory testing protocol was performed and a voxel-lesion behaviour mapping analysis in 24 patients with acute unilateral cortical damage was applied.RESULTS: Our data demonstrate that patients with lesions of the posterior IC have deficits in temperature perception, but did not show other sensory deficits such as hot or cold pain perception associated with specific lesion locations.CONCLUSION: Our data allow the conclusion that the posterior IC may represent the major region responsible for encoding warm and cold perception in the brain. To what extent focal IC lesions may also impair pain processing or induce post-stroke pain has to be addressed in future studies including more patients.

KW - Aged

KW - Brain Mapping

KW - Cerebral Cortex

KW - Cohort Studies

KW - Female

KW - Humans

KW - Hypesthesia

KW - Magnetic Resonance Imaging

KW - Male

KW - Middle Aged

KW - Pain Perception

KW - Perception

KW - Somatosensory Cortex

KW - Stroke

KW - Thermosensing

KW - Touch Perception

KW - Journal Article

KW - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

U2 - 10.1002/j.1532-2149.2014.501.x

DO - 10.1002/j.1532-2149.2014.501.x

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 24687886

VL - 18

SP - 1385

EP - 1393

JO - EUR J PAIN

JF - EUR J PAIN

SN - 1090-3801

IS - 10

ER -