Localization of stuttering based on causal brain lesions

Author:

Theys Catherine123ORCID,Jaakkola Elina45,Melzer Tracy R1367,De Nil Luc F89,Guenther Frank H1011,Cohen Alexander L121314ORCID,Fox Michael D1314,Joutsa Juho415ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology, Speech and Hearing, University of Canterbury , 8140 Christchurch , New Zealand

2. New Zealand Institute of Language, Brain and Behaviour, University of Canterbury , 8140 Christchurch , New Zealand

3. New Zealand Brain Research Institute , 8011 Christchurch , New Zealand

4. Turku Brain and Mind Center, Clinical Neurosciences, University of Turku , 20014 Turku , Finland

5. Department of Psychiatry, University of Helsinki and Helsinki University Hospital , 00014 Helsinki , Finland

6. Department of Medicine, University of Otago , 8011 Christchurch , New Zealand

7. RHCNZ—Pacific Radiology Canterbury , 8031 Christchurch , New Zealand

8. Department of Speech-Language Pathology, University of Toronto , Toronto, ON M5G 1V7 , Canada

9. Rehabilitation Sciences Institute, University of Toronto , Toronto, ON M5G 1V7 , Canada

10. Departments of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences and Biomedical Engineering, Boston University , Boston, MA 02215 , USA

11. The Picower Institute for Learning and Memory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology , Cambridge, MA 02139 , USA

12. Department of Neurology, Boston Children’s Hospital , Boston, MA 02115 , USA

13. Center for Brain Circuit Therapeutics, Brigham and Women’s Hospital , Boston, MA 02115 , USA

14. Department of Neurology, Harvard Medical School , Boston, MA 02115 , USA

15. Turku PET Centre, Neurocenter, Turku University Hospital , 20014 Turku , Finland

Abstract

Abstract Stuttering affects approximately 1 in 100 adults and can result in significant communication problems and social anxiety. It most often occurs as a developmental disorder but can also be caused by focal brain damage. These latter cases may lend unique insight into the brain regions causing stuttering. Here, we investigated the neuroanatomical substrate of stuttering using three independent datasets: (i) case reports from the published literature of acquired neurogenic stuttering following stroke (n = 20, 14 males/six females, 16–77 years); (ii) a clinical single study cohort with acquired neurogenic stuttering following stroke (n = 20, 13 males/seven females, 45–87 years); and (iii) adults with persistent developmental stuttering (n = 20, 14 males/six females, 18–43 years). We used the first two datasets and lesion network mapping to test whether lesions causing acquired stuttering map to a common brain network. We then used the third dataset to test whether this lesion-based network was relevant to developmental stuttering. In our literature dataset, we found that lesions causing stuttering occurred in multiple heterogeneous brain regions, but these lesion locations were all functionally connected to a common network centred around the left putamen, including the claustrum, amygdalostriatal transition area and other adjacent areas. This finding was shown to be specific for stuttering (PFWE < 0.05) and reproducible in our independent clinical cohort of patients with stroke-induced stuttering (PFWE < 0.05), resulting in a common acquired stuttering network across both stroke datasets. Within the common acquired stuttering network, we found a significant association between grey matter volume and stuttering impact for adults with persistent developmental stuttering in the left posteroventral putamen, extending into the adjacent claustrum and amygdalostriatal transition area (PFWE < 0.05). We conclude that lesions causing acquired neurogenic stuttering map to a common brain network, centred to the left putamen, claustrum and amygdalostriatal transition area. The association of this lesion-based network with symptom severity in developmental stuttering suggests a shared neuroanatomy across aetiologies.

Funder

Royal Society of New Zealand Marsden Fund

Finnish Medical Foundation

Finnish Parkinson Foundation

Health Research Council of New Zealand Charles Hercus Career Development Fellowship

National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders

National Institutes of Health

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council

NIMH

Simons Foundation Autism Research Initiative

Kaye Family Research Endowment

Ellison/Baszucki Family Foundation

Manley Family

Sigrid Juselius Foundation

Instrumentarium Research Foundation

University of Turku

Turku University Hospital

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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