UCLA study shows
brain's ability
to reorganize
Visually
impaired
people
appear to be
fearless,
navigating
busy
sidewalks
and
crosswalks,
safely
finding
their way
using
nothing more
than a cane
as a guide.
The reason
they can do
this,
researchers
suggest, is
that in at
least some
circumstances,
blindness
can heighten
other
senses,
helping
individuals
adapt.
Now
scientists
from the
UCLA
Department
of Neurology
have
confirmed
that
blindness
causes
structural
changes in
the
brain, indicating
that the
brain may
reorganize
itself
functionally
in order to
adapt to a
loss in
sensory
input.
Reporting in
the January
issue of the
journal
NeuroImage
(currently
online),
Natasha
Leporé, a
postgraduate
researcher at
UCLA's
Laboratory
of Neuro
Imaging, and
colleagues
found that
visual
regions of
the brain
were smaller
in volume in
blind
individuals
than in
sighted
ones.
However, for
non-visual
areas, the
trend was
reversed —
they grew
larger in
the blind.
This, the
researchers
say,
suggests
that the
brains of
blind
individuals
are
compensating
for the
reduced
volume in
areas
normally
devoted to
vision.
"This study
shows the
exceptional
plasticity
of the brain
and its
ability to
reorganize
itself after
a major
input — in
this case,
vision — is
lost," said
Leporé. "In
other words,
it appears
the brain
will attempt
to
compensate
for the fact
that a
person can
no longer
see, and
this is
particularly
true for
those who
are blind
since early
infancy, a
developmental
period in
which the
brain is
much more
plastic and
modifiable
than it is
in
adulthood."
Researchers
used an
extremely
sensitive
type of
brain
imaging
called
tensor-based
morphometry,
which can
detect very
subtle
changes in
brain
volume, to
examine the
brains of
three
different
groups: those
who lost
their sight
before the
age of 5;
those who
lost their
sight after
14; and a
control
group of
sighted
individuals.
Comparing
the two
groups of
blind
individuals,
the
researchers found
that loss
and gain of
brain matter
depended
heavily on
when the
blindness
occurred.
Only the
early-blind
group differed
significantly
from the
control
group in an
area of the
brain's
corpus
callosum
that aids in
the
transmission
of visual
information
between the
two
hemispheres
of the
brain. The
researchers
suggest this
may be
because of
the reduced
amount of
myelination
in the
absence of
visual
input.
Myelin,
the fatty
sheaf that
surrounds
nerves and
allows for
fast
communication,
develops
rapidly in
the very
young. When
the onset of
blindness
occurs in
adolescence or
later, the
growth of
myelin is
already
relatively
complete, so
the
structure of
the corpus
callosum may
not be
strongly
influenced
by the loss
of visual
input.
In both
blind
groups,
however, the
researchers
found
significant
enlargement
in areas of
the brain
not
responsible
for vision.
For example,
the frontal
lobes, which
are
involved with, among
other
things,
working
memory, were
found to be
abnormally
enlarged,
perhaps
offering an
anatomical
foundation
for some
of blind
individuals'
enhanced skills.
Previous studies
have found
that when
walking down
a corridor
with
windows, the
blind
are adept at
detecting
the
windows' presence
because they
can feel
subtle
changes in
temperature
and
distinguish
between the
auditory
echoes
caused by
walls and
windows.
Leporé noted
that
scientists
and others
have long
been curious
about
whether or
not blind
individuals
compensated
for their
lack of
vision by
developing
greater
abilities in
their
remaining
senses. For
example,
the 18th-century
French
philosopher
Denis
Diderot
wrote of his
amazement
with some of
the
abilities
shown by
blind
individuals, in particular a
blind
mathematician
who could
distinguish
real from
fake
coins just
by touching
them.
But it
wasn't until
the early
1990s
that the
suspicions of
science
began to be
confirmed
with the
development
of
neuroimaging
tools.
"That
allowed
researchers
to probe
inside the
brain in a
non-invasive
manner,
yielding
insights
into the
impressive
adaptive
capacity of
the brain to
reorganize
itself
following
injury or
sensory
deprivation,"
Leporé said.
Other
authors
included
Caroline
Brun, Yi-Yu
Chou, Agatha
D. Lee,
Sarah K.
Madsen,
Arthur W.
Toga
and Paul M.
Thompson,
all of UCLA,
and Franco
Leporé,
Madeleine
Fortin,
Frédéric
Gougoux,
Maryse
Lassonde and
Patrice
Voss, of the
University
of Montreal.
This study
was
supported by
the Canadian
Institutes
of Health
Research,
the Canada
Research
Chairs
Program, the
National
Institute on
Aging, the
National
Library of
Medicine,
the National
Institute of
Biomedical
Imaging and
Bioengineering,
the National
Center for
Research
Resources,
the National
Institute
for Child
Health and
Development,
and a grant
from the
National
Institutes
of Health.
Source:
University of
California - Los
Angeles
Published on
27th November
2009