When proprioceptive feedback enhances visual perception of self-body movement: rehabilitation perspectives

Front Hum Neurosci. 2023 May 12:17:1144033. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2023.1144033. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Introduction: Rehabilitation approaches take advantage of vision's important role in kinesthesia, using the mirror paradigm as a means to reduce phantom limb pain or to promote recovery from hemiparesis. Notably, it is currently applied to provide a visual reafferentation of the missing limb to relieve amputees' pain. However, the efficiency of this method is still debated, possibly due to the absence of concomitant coherent proprioceptive feedback. We know that combining congruent visuo-proprioceptive signals at the hand level enhances movement perception in healthy people. However, much less is known about lower limbs, for which actions are far less visually controlled in everyday life than upper limbs. Therefore, the present study aimed to explore, with the mirror paradigm, the benefit of combined visuo-proprioceptive feedback from the lower limbs of healthy participants.

Methods: We compared the movement illusions driven by visual or proprioceptive afferents and tested the extent to which adding proprioceptive input to the visual reflection of the leg improved the resulting movement illusion. To this end, 23 healthy adults were exposed to mirror or proprioceptive stimulation and concomitant visuo-proprioceptive stimulation. In the visual conditions, participants were asked to voluntarily move their left leg in extension and look at its reflection in the mirror. In the proprioceptive conditions, a mechanical vibration was applied to the hamstring muscle of the leg hidden behind the mirror to simulate an extension of the leg, either exclusively or concomitantly, to the visual reflection of the leg in the mirror.

Results: (i) Visual stimulation evoked leg movement illusions but with a lower velocity than the actual movement reflection on the mirror; (ii) proprioceptive stimulation alone provided more salient illusions than the mirror illusion; and (iii) adding a congruent proprioceptive stimulation improved the saliency, amplitude, and velocity of the illusion.

Conclusion: The present findings confirm that visuo-proprioceptive integration occurs efficiently when the mirror paradigm is coupled with mechanical vibration at the lower limbs, thus providing promising new perspectives for rehabilitation.

Keywords: kinesthesia; leg movement; mirror therapy; muscle tendon vibration; proprio-visual integration.

Grants and funding

This Ph.D. fellowship of RS was supported by Agence Innovation Défense (AID) and this work was supported by L’Agence Nationale de la Recherche (Project Phantom Pain–ANR-21-ASTR-0022). This work also benefited from the environment of NeuroMarseille Institute supported by French government under the Programme “Investissements d’Avenir”, Initiative d’Excellence d’Aix-Marseille Université via Amidex funding (AMX-19-IET-004) and L’Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR-17-EURE-0029).