Lesion network mapping of eye-opening apraxia

Author:

Zarifkar Pardis1,Shaff Nicholas A2,Nersesjan Vardan13ORCID,Mayer Andrew R2ORCID,Ryman Sephira2,Kondziella Daniel14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen University Hospital , 2100 Copenhagen , Denmark

2. Mind Research Network , Albuquerque, NM 87131 , USA

3. Copenhagen Research Center for Mental Health—CORE, Copenhagen University Hospital , 2900 Copenhagen , Denmark

4. Department of Clinical Medicine, University of Copenhagen , 1172 Copenhagen , Denmark

Abstract

Abstract Apraxia of eyelid opening (or eye-opening apraxia) is characterized by the inability to voluntarily open the eyes because of impaired supranuclear control. Here, we examined the neural substrates implicated in eye-opening apraxia through lesion network mapping. We analysed brain lesions from 27 eye-opening apraxia stroke patients and compared them with lesions from 20 aphasia and 45 hemiballismus patients serving as controls. Lesions were mapped onto a standard brain atlas using resting-state functional MRI data derived from 966 healthy adults in the Harvard Dataverse. Our analyses revealed that most eye-opening apraxia-associated lesions occurred in the right hemisphere, with subcortical or mixed cortical/subcortical involvement. Despite their anatomical heterogeneity, these lesions functionally converged on the bilateral dorsal anterior and posterior insula. The functional connectivity map for eye-opening apraxia was distinct from those for aphasia and hemiballismus. Hemiballismus lesions predominantly mapped onto the putamen, particularly the posterolateral region, while aphasia lesions were localized to language-processing regions, primarily within the frontal operculum. In summary, in patients with eye-opening apraxia, disruptions in the dorsal anterior and posterior insula may compromise their capacity to initiate the appropriate eyelid-opening response to relevant interoceptive and exteroceptive stimuli, implicating a complex interplay between salience detection and motor execution.

Funder

Novo Nordisk

Lundbeck Foundation

Offerfonden

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Biological Psychiatry,Psychiatry and Mental health

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