Atrophy of Spared Gray Matter Tissue Predicts Poorer Motor Recovery and Rehabilitation Response in Chronic Stroke

Author:

Gauthier Lynne V.1,Taub Edward1,Mark Victor W.1,Barghi Ameen1,Uswatte Gitendra1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (L.V.G.), The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH; the Departments of Psychology (E.T., A.B., G.U.), Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation and Neurology (V.W.M.), and Physical Therapy (G.U.), University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL.

Abstract

Background and Purpose— Although the motor deficit after stroke is clearly due to the structural brain damage that has been sustained, this relationship is attenuated from the acute to chronic phases. We investigated the possibility that motor impairment and response to constraint-induced movement therapy in patients with chronic stroke may relate more strongly to the structural integrity of brain structures remote from the lesion than to measures of overt tissue damage. Methods— Voxel-based morphometry analysis was performed on MRI scans from 80 patients with chronic stroke to investigate whether variations in gray matter density were correlated with extent of residual motor impairment or with constraint-induced movement therapy-induced motor recovery. Results— Decreased gray matter density in noninfarcted motor regions was significantly correlated with magnitude of residual motor deficit. In addition, reduced gray matter density in multiple remote brain regions predicted a lesser extent of motor improvement from constraint-induced movement therapy. Conclusions— Atrophy in seemingly healthy parts of the brain that are distant from the infarct accounts for at least a portion of the sustained motor deficit in chronic stroke.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)

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