The Strength of the Corticospinal Tract Not the Reticulospinal Tract Determines Upper-Limb Impairment Level and Capacity for Skill-Acquisition in the Sub-Acute Post-Stroke Period

Author:

Hammerbeck Ulrike12ORCID,Tyson Sarah F.2ORCID,Samraj Prawin3,Hollands Kristen4,Krakauer John W.56,Rothwell John7

Affiliation:

1. Geoffrey Jefferson Brain Research Centre, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Healthy, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK

2. Department of Health Professions, Faculty of Health, Psychology and Social Care, Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester, UK

3. Department of Medical Physics, Northern Care Alliance NHS Trust, Salford, UK

4. Department of Health Sciences, University of Salford, Salford, UK

5. Departments of Neurology, Neuroscience and Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, The John Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA

6. The Santa Fe Institute, Santa Fe, NM, USA

7. Institute of Neurology, University College London, London, UK

Abstract

Background. Upper-limb impairment in patients with chronic stroke appears to be partly attributable to an upregulated reticulospinal tract (RST). Here, we assessed whether the impact of corticospinal (CST) and RST connectivity on motor impairment and skill-acquisition differs in sub-acute stroke, using transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS)–based proxy measures. Methods. Thirty-eight stroke survivors were randomized to either reach training 3-6 weeks post-stroke (plus usual care) or usual care only. At 3, 6 and 12 weeks post-stroke, we measured ipsilesional and contralesional cortical connectivity (surrogates for CST and RST connectivity, respectively) to weak pre-activated triceps and deltoid muscles with single pulse TMS, accuracy of planar reaching movements, muscle strength (Motricity Index) and synergies (Fugl-Meyer upper-limb score). Results. Strength and presence of synergies were associated with ipsilesional (CST) connectivity to the paretic upper-limb at 3 and 12 weeks. Training led to planar reaching skill beyond that expected from spontaneous recovery and occurred for both weak and strong ipsilesional tract integrity. Reaching ability, presence of synergies, skill-acquisition and strength were not affected by either the presence or absence of contralesional (RST) connectivity. Conclusion. The degree of ipsilesional CST connectivity is the main determinant of proximal dexterity, upper-limb strength and synergy expression in sub-acute stroke. In contrast, there is no evidence for enhanced contralesional RST connectivity contributing to any of these components of impairment. In the sub-acute post-stroke period, the balance of activity between CST and RST may matter more for the paretic phenotype than RST upregulation per se.

Funder

The Stroke Association, Post-doctoral Fellowship

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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