Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 12, 3445-3455, Copyright © 1992 by Society for Neuroscience
Changes in the cortical map of the hand following postnatal median nerve injury in monkeys: modification of somatotopic aggregates
JT Wall, MF Huerta and JH Kaas
Department of Anatomy, Medical College of Ohio, Toledo 43699.
Median nerves to the hands of 8-15-d-old marmoset monkeys were transected
and precluded from regeneration by ligation. Following periods of 0.4-1.5
years, features of organization in the cortical area 3b hand map were
assessed neurophysiologically, and compared to features in normally reared
monkeys. Cortical features in monkeys with both histories were similar in
certain respects. (1) Receptive field organization was similar in terms of
tactile thresholds and receptive field size, continuity, and glabrous-hairy
specificity. (2) Somatotopic organization was similar in terms of the
continuity of the glabrous representation, and progressions of receptive
field shifts across some parts of the hand map. (3) Finally, the overall
size of the hand map did not change. In contrast, other cortical features
clearly differed following these developmental histories. (1) Neurons at
virtually all recording sites in normal hand maps responded to light
mechanical stimulation, whereas, following injury, neurons at about 8% of
the recording sites responded only to high-intensity stimuli. (2)
Somatotopic organization differed in terms of the presence or absence of
the representation of skin autonomously innervated by the median nerve, the
number and continuity of representations of hairy skin, and the spatial
interfacing of representations. (3) Finally, there were differences in the
areas and widths of representations of parts of the hand. The overall
impression is that there is a correspondence between the cortical features
that changed most after injury, and the features that varied most in
individual normal monkeys: in both circumstances the most variable features
involved properties of spatial patterning across large aggregates of
neurons as reflected by the size, shape, continuity, and interfacing of
representations. A hypothesis is proposed that suggests that the cortical
hand map normally consists of a number of representations that are capable
of developing and surviving somewhat autonomously of each other. The
features of spatial patterning in the mosaiclike map of these
representations are influenced by postnatal availability of inputs from
intact hand nerves.