Structural connectivity associated with the sense of body ownership: a diffusion tensor imaging and disconnection study in patients with bodily awareness disorder

Abstract The brain mechanisms underlying the emergence of a normal sense of body ownership can be investigated starting from pathological conditions in which body awareness is selectively impaired. Here, we focused on pathological embodiment, a body ownership disturbance observed in brain-damaged pa...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain communications 2022, Vol.4 (1), p.fcac032-fcac032
Hauptverfasser: Errante, Antonino, Rossi Sebastiano, Alice, Ziccarelli, Settimio, Bruno, Valentina, Rozzi, Stefano, Pia, Lorenzo, Fogassi, Leonardo, Garbarini, Francesca
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract The brain mechanisms underlying the emergence of a normal sense of body ownership can be investigated starting from pathological conditions in which body awareness is selectively impaired. Here, we focused on pathological embodiment, a body ownership disturbance observed in brain-damaged patients who misidentify other people’s limbs as their own. We investigated whether such body ownership disturbance can be classified as a disconnection syndrome, using three different approaches based on diffusion tensor imaging: (i) reconstruction of disconnectome maps in a large sample (N = 70) of stroke patients with and without pathological embodiment; (ii) probabilistic tractography, performed on the age-matched healthy controls (N = 16), to trace cortical connections potentially interrupted in patients with pathological embodiment and spared in patients without this pathological condition; (iii) probabilistic ‘in vivo’ tractography on two patients without and one patient with pathological embodiment. The converging results revealed the arcuate fasciculus and the third branch of the superior longitudinal fasciculus as mainly involved fibre tracts in patients showing pathological embodiment, suggesting that this condition could be related to the disconnection between frontal, parietal and temporal areas. This evidence raises the possibility of a ventral self-body recognition route including regions where visual (computed in occipito-temporal areas) and sensorimotor (stored in premotor and parietal areas) body representations are integrated, giving rise to a normal sense of body ownership. Errante et al.’s study demonstrates that pathological embodiment, a body ownership disturbance observed in stroke patients who misidentify other people’s limbs as their own, emerges from the disconnection of multiple temporal, parietal and premotor areas, which play a key role in integrating visual and sensorimotor body representations. Graphical Abstract Graphical Abstract
ISSN:2632-1297
2632-1297
DOI:10.1093/braincomms/fcac032