Frontiers in Psychology (Jun 2022)
Body Structural Description Impairment in Complex Regional Pain Syndrome Type I
Abstract
BackgroundComplex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS) is a clinical syndrome composed of chronic pain, motor impairment, and autonomic dysfunction, usually affecting a limb. Although CRPS seems to be a peripheral disorder, it is accompanied by parietal alterations leading to body schema impairments (the online representations of the body). Impairments to body structural description (the topographical bodily map) were not assessed systematically in CRPS. A patient we encountered with severe disruption to her bodily structural description led us to study this domain further.AimsTo document aberrant body structural description in subjects with CRPS using an object assembly task.MethodsBody Schema Study: 6 subjects with CRPS-I and six age and sex-matched healthy controls completed visual puzzles taken from WAIS-III and WAIS-R. The puzzles were either related to the human body or non-human body objects. Mann–Whitney U-tests were performed to compare groups’ performances.ResultsThe CRPS group received relatively lower scores compared to controls for human body objects (u = 3, p < 0.05), whereas the non-human object scoring did not reveal significant differences between groups (u = 9, p > 0.05).ConclusionCRPS subjects suffer from impaired body structural description, taking the form of body parts disassembly and body parts discontinuity. This impairment can serve as a nidus for aberrant psychological representation of the body.
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