Low-Frequency Oscillations Are a Biomarker of Injury and Recovery After Stroke

Author:

Cassidy Jessica M.1ORCID,Wodeyar Anirudh2,Wu Jennifer34,Kaur Kiranjot3,Masuda Ashley K.3,Srinivasan Ramesh25,Cramer Steven C.67

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Allied Health Sciences, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (J.M.C.)

2. Department of Cognitive Sciences (A.W., R.S.), University of California, Irvine

3. Department of Neurology (J.W., K.K., A.K.M.), University of California, Irvine

4. Department of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation (J.W.), University of California, Irvine

5. Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of California, Irvine (R.S.)

6. Department of Neurology, University of California, Los Angeles (S.C.C.)

7. California Rehabilitation Institute, Los Angeles (S.C.C.).

Abstract

Background and Purpose— Low-frequency oscillations reflect brain injury but also contribute to normal behaviors. We examined hypotheses relating electroencephalography measures, including low-frequency oscillations, to injury and motor recovery poststroke. Methods— Patients with stroke completed structural neuroimaging, a resting-state electroencephalography recording and clinical testing. A subset admitted to an inpatient rehabilitation facility also underwent serial electroencephalography recordings. The relationship that electroencephalography measures (power and coherence with leads overlying ipsilesional primary motor cortex [iM1]) had with injury and motor status was assessed, focusing on delta (1–3 Hz) and high-beta (20–30 Hz) bands. Results— Across all patients (n=62), larger infarct volume was related to higher delta band power in bilateral hemispheres and to higher delta band coherence between iM1 and bilateral regions. In chronic stroke, higher delta power bilaterally correlated with better motor status. In subacute stroke, higher delta coherence between iM1 and bilateral areas correlated with poorer motor status. These coherence findings were confirmed in serial recordings from 18 patients in an inpatient rehabilitation facility. Here, interhemispheric coherence between leads overlying iM1 and contralesional M1 was elevated at inpatient rehabilitation facility admission compared with healthy controls (n=22), declining to control levels over time. Decreases in interhemispheric coherence between iM1 and contralesional M1 correlated with better motor recovery. Conclusions— Delta band coherence with iM1 related to greater injury and poorer motor status subacutely, while delta band power related to greater injury and better motor status chronically. Low-frequency oscillations reflect both injury and recovery after stroke and may be useful biomarkers in stroke recovery and rehabilitation.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Advanced and Specialised Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Clinical Neurology

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