Traumatic brachial plexus lesions may lead to permanent impairment of hand function despite brachial plexus surgery. In selected cases the affected forearm can be amputated and replaced by a bionic hand. It is unclear how cortical activation patterns change after the injury and after acquisition of the hand prosthesis considering the complex changes in sensory and motor feedback. The aim of the study is to measure cortical activity with fMRI during actual and imagery movements with the affected and healthy arm in a group of patients after traumatic brachial plexus injury and a group in whom this was followed by replacement with a bionic hand. In this prospective study three groups of patients will participate: 1) 3 adult patients with a traumatic brachial plexus lesion eligible for a bionic arm but prior to its acquisition, 2) 3 patients with a traumatic brachial plexus lesion who have acquired the bionic arm already, and 3) 10 healthy subjects. The investigators will measure cortical activity using fMRI BOLD tasks of closing the hand and motor imagery of this movement. Cortical activity will be compared between the three groups. Additionally, regional gray matter volume, resting-state, and DTI networks will be studied. Written informed consent will be provided prior to the investigation. The complete examination has a duration of approximately 45 minutes.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
11
MRI scan
Medical University of Vienna
Vienna, Austria
task-related cortical activity - fMRI BOLD signal
The investigators will measure cortical activity measured as a fMRI BOLD (blood-oxygen-level-dependent) signal, during four tasks: closing the hand (lef tand right) and motor imagery of this movement.
Time frame: MRI task scanning approximately 20 minutes
resting state activity - fMRI BOLD signal
The investigators will measure brain activity measured as a fMRI BOLD signal (blood-oxygen-level-dependent) during rest.
Time frame: MRI resting state scanning approximately 10 minutes
diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) MRI
The investigators will measure mean diffusivity of the brain with DTI.
Time frame: DTI scanning approximately 10 minutes
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