The neuronal correlates of mirror therapy: an fMRI study on mirror induced visual illusions in patients with stroke.

Marian E Michielsen, Marion Smits, Gerard M Ribbers, Henk J Stam, Jos N van der Geest, Johannes B J Bussmann, Ruud W Selles
Author Information
  1. Marian E Michielsen: Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Erasmus MC University Medical Center, Room Ee-1622, PO Box 2040, 3000 CA Rotterdam, The Netherlands. m.michielsen@erasmusmc.nl

Abstract

AIM: To investigate the neuronal basis for the effects of mirror therapy in patients with stroke.
METHODS: 22 patients with stroke participated in this study. The authors used functional MRI to investigate neuronal activation patterns in two experiments. In the unimanual experiment, patients moved their unaffected hand, either while observing it directly (no-mirror condition) or while observing its mirror reflection (mirror condition). In the bimanual experiment, patients moved both hands, either while observing the affected hand directly (no-mirror condition) or while observing the mirror reflection of the unaffected hand in place of the affected hand (mirror condition). A two-factorial analysis with movement (activity vs rest) and mirror (mirror vs no mirror) as main factors was performed to assess neuronal activity resultant of the mirror illusion.
RESULTS: Data on 18 participants were suitable for analysis. Results showed a significant interaction effect of movement×mirror during the bimanual experiment. Activated regions were the precuneus and the posterior cingulate cortex (p<0.05 false discovery rate).
CONCLUSION: In this first study on the neuronal correlates of the mirror illusion in patients with stroke, the authors showed that during bimanual movement, the mirror illusion increases activity in the precuneus and the posterior cingulate cortex, areas associated with awareness of the self and spatial attention. By increasing awareness of the affected limb, the mirror illusion might reduce learnt non-use. The fact that the authors did not observe mirror-related activity in areas of the motor or mirror neuron system questions popular theories that attribute the clinical effects of mirror therapy to these systems.

MeSH Term

Brain
Brain Mapping
Female
Functional Laterality
Hand
Humans
Illusions
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Middle Aged
Movement
Psychomotor Performance
Stroke

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0mirrorpatientsneuronalstrokehandobservingconditionactivityillusionstudyauthorsexperimentbimanualaffectedinvestigateeffectstherapymovedunaffectedeitherdirectlyno-mirrorreflectionanalysismovementvsshowedprecuneusposteriorcingulatecortexcorrelatesareasawarenessAIM:basisMETHODS:22participatedusedfunctionalMRIactivationpatternstwoexperimentsunimanualhandsplacetwo-factorialrestmainfactorsperformedassessresultantRESULTS:Data18participantssuitableResultssignificantinteractioneffectmovement×mirrorActivatedregionsp<005falsediscoveryrateCONCLUSION:firstincreasesassociatedselfspatialattentionincreasinglimbmightreducelearntnon-usefactobservemirror-relatedmotorneuronsystemquestionspopulartheoriesattributeclinicalsystemstherapy:fMRIinducedvisualillusions

Similar Articles

Cited By