Can you still feel a limb that's gone? - Joshua W. Pate

795,544 views ・ 2018-10-04

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:06
The vast majority of people who’ve lost a limb can still feel it—
0
6330
4939
00:11
not as a memory or vague shape, but in complete lifelike detail.
1
11269
5707
00:16
They can flex their phantom fingers
2
16976
2462
00:19
and sometimes even feel the chafe of a watchband
3
19438
3284
00:22
or the throb of an ingrown toenail.
4
22722
3226
00:25
And astonishingly enough,
5
25948
1969
00:27
occasionally even people born without a limb can feel a phantom.
6
27917
5547
00:33
So what causes phantom limb sensations?
7
33464
3186
00:36
The accuracy of these apparitions
8
36650
2042
00:38
suggests that we have a map of the body in our brains.
9
38692
3672
00:42
And the fact that it’s possible
10
42364
1383
00:43
for someone who’s never had a limb to feel one
11
43747
3197
00:46
implies we are born with at least the beginnings of this map.
12
46944
4663
00:51
But one thing sets the phantoms that appear after amputation
13
51607
3565
00:55
apart from their flesh and blood predecessors:
14
55172
3287
00:58
the vast majority of them are painful.
15
58459
3134
01:01
To fully understand phantom limbs and phantom pain,
16
61593
3854
01:05
we have to consider the entire pathway from limb to brain.
17
65447
4355
01:09
Our limbs are full of sensory neurons responsible for everything
18
69802
3822
01:13
from the textures we feel with our fingertips
19
73624
2458
01:16
to our understanding of where our bodies are in space.
20
76082
3966
01:20
Neural pathways carry this sensory input through the spinal cord
21
80048
4294
01:24
and up to the brain.
22
84342
1667
01:26
Since so much of this path lies outside the limb itself,
23
86009
4033
01:30
most of it remains behind after an amputation.
24
90042
4142
01:34
But the loss of a limb
25
94184
1439
01:35
alters the way signals travel at every step of the pathway.
26
95623
4637
01:40
At the site of an amputation,
27
100260
1771
01:42
severed nerve endings can thicken and become more sensitive,
28
102031
4233
01:46
transmitting distress signals even in response to mild pressure.
29
106264
4433
01:50
Under normal circumstances,
30
110697
1689
01:52
these signals would be curtailed in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord.
31
112386
4602
01:56
For reasons we don’t fully understand, after an amputation,
32
116988
3969
02:00
there is a loss of this inhibitory control in the dorsal horn,
33
120957
4666
02:05
and signals can intensify.
34
125623
3153
02:08
Once they pass through the spinal cord, sensory signals reach the brain.
35
128776
4438
02:13
There, the somatosensory cortex processes them.
36
133214
3980
02:17
The entire body is mapped in this cortex.
37
137194
3417
02:20
Sensitive body parts with many nerve endings,
38
140611
2764
02:23
like the lips and hands,
39
143375
1761
02:25
are represented by the largest areas.
40
145136
2574
02:27
The cortical homunculus is a model of the human body
41
147710
3284
02:30
with proportions based on the size of each body part’s representation in the cortex,
42
150994
5487
02:36
The amount of cortex devoted to a specific body part can grow or shrink
43
156481
4925
02:41
based on how much sensory input the brain receives from that body part.
44
161406
4718
02:46
For example, representation of the left hand is larger in violinists
45
166124
5089
02:51
than in non-violinists.
46
171213
2480
02:53
The brain also increases cortical representation
47
173693
2684
02:56
when a body part is injured
48
176377
2112
02:58
in order to heighten sensations that alert us to danger.
49
178489
3770
03:02
This increased representation can lead to phantom pain.
50
182259
4441
03:06
The cortical map is also most likely responsible
51
186700
2917
03:09
for the feeling of body parts that are no longer there,
52
189617
3606
03:13
because they still have representation in the brain.
53
193223
3282
03:16
Over time, this representation may shrink and the phantom limb may shrink with it.
54
196505
5667
03:22
But phantom limb sensations don’t necessarily disappear on their own.
55
202172
4585
03:26
Treatment for phantom pain usually requires
56
206757
2875
03:29
a combination of physical therapy,
57
209632
1863
03:31
medications for pain management,
58
211495
1807
03:33
prosthetics,
59
213302
1075
03:34
and time.
60
214377
1675
03:36
A technique called mirror box therapy
61
216052
2249
03:38
can be very helpful in developing the range of motion
62
218301
3067
03:41
and reducing pain in the phantom limb.
63
221368
2599
03:43
The patient places the phantom limb into a box behind a mirror
64
223967
4109
03:48
and the intact limb in front of the mirror.
65
228076
2623
03:50
This tricks the brain into seeing the phantom
66
230699
3167
03:53
rather than just feeling it.
67
233866
2047
03:55
Scientists are developing virtual reality treatments
68
235913
3132
03:59
that make the experience of mirror box therapy even more lifelike.
69
239045
4681
04:03
Prosthetics can also create a similar effect—
70
243726
2974
04:06
many patients report pain
71
246700
1618
04:08
primarily when they remove their prosthetics at night.
72
248318
3275
04:11
And phantom limbs may in turn
73
251593
2208
04:13
help patients conceptualize prosthetics as extensions of their bodies
74
253801
4932
04:18
and manipulate them intuitively.
75
258733
2409
04:21
There are still many questions about phantom limbs.
76
261142
3388
04:24
We don’t know why some amputees escape the pain
77
264530
3158
04:27
typically associated with these apparitions,
78
267688
2320
04:30
or why some don’t have phantoms at all.
79
270008
2482
04:32
And further research into phantom limbs
80
272490
2659
04:35
isn’t just applicable to the people who experience them.
81
275149
3378
04:38
A deeper understanding of these apparitions
82
278527
2270
04:40
will give us insight into the work our brains do every day
83
280797
4230
04:45
to build the world as we perceive it.
84
285027
2598
04:47
They’re an important reminder
85
287625
1647
04:49
that the realities we experience are, in fact, subjective.
86
289272
4136
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7