Grey and white matter atrophy 1 year after stroke aphasia

Author:

Egorova-Brumley Natalia12ORCID,Khlif Mohamed Salah1,Werden Emilio1,Bird Laura J.1ORCID,Brodtmann Amy1

Affiliation:

1. The Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health, Melbourne, Australia

2. The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Dynamic whole-brain changes occur following stroke, and not just in association with recovery. We tested the hypothesis that the presence of a specific behavioural deficit after stroke would be associated with structural decline (atrophy) in the brain regions supporting the affected function, by examining language deficits post-stroke. We quantified whole-brain structural volume changes longitudinally (3–12 months) in stroke participants with (N = 32) and without aphasia (N = 59) as assessed by the Token Test at 3 months post-stroke, compared with a healthy control group (N = 29). While no significant difference in language decline rates (change in Token Test scores from 3 to 12 months) was observed between groups and some participants in the aphasic group improved their scores, stroke participants with aphasia symptoms at 3 months showed significant atrophy (>2%, P = 0.0001) of the left inferior frontal gyrus not observed in either healthy control or non-aphasic groups over the 3–12 months period. We found significant group differences in the inferior frontal gyrus volume, accounting for age, sex, stroke severity at baseline, education and total intracranial volume (Bonferroni-corrected P = 0.0003). In a subset of participants (aphasic N = 14, non-aphasic N = 36, and healthy control N = 25) with available diffusion-weighted imaging data, we found significant atrophy in the corpus callosum and the left superior longitudinal fasciculus in the aphasic compared with the healthy control group. Language deficits at 3 months post-stroke are associated with accelerated structural decline specific to the left inferior frontal gyrus, highlighting that known functional brain reorganization underlying behavioural improvement may occur in parallel with atrophy of brain regions supporting the language function.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Brain Foundation

Wicking Trust

Collie Trust

Fiona Myer Family Foundation

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science

Cited by 7 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Distinct brain morphometry patterns revealed by deep learning improve prediction of post-stroke aphasia severity;Communications Medicine;2024-06-12

2. Changes in White Matter Microstructure Over 3 Years in People With and Without Stroke;Neurology;2023-04-18

3. Right Hemisphere and Speech Recovery in Post-Stroke Aphasia;Клиническая и специальная психология;2023-04-10

4. The elusive metric of lesion load;Brain Structure and Function;2023-03-22

5. Advanced Diffusion MRI for prediction of Stroke Recovery;Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging;2022-11-15

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