Assessing the Clinical Effect of Residual Cortical Disconnection After Ischemic Strokes

被引:56
作者
Bonilha, Leonardo [1 ]
Rorden, Chris [2 ]
Fridriksson, Julius [3 ]
机构
[1] Med Univ S Carolina, Dept Neurol, Charleston, SC 29425 USA
[2] Univ S Carolina, Dept Psychol, Columbia, SC 29208 USA
[3] Univ S Carolina, Dept Commun Sci & Disorders, Columbia, SC 29208 USA
关键词
aphasia; connectome; diffusion tensor imaging; stroke; ANTERIOR TEMPORAL INVOLVEMENT; APHASIA; CONNECTOME; RETRIEVAL; APRAXIA;
D O I
10.1161/STROKEAHA.113.004137
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
100204 [神经病学];
摘要
Background and Purpose Studies assessing the relationship between chronic poststroke language impairment (aphasia) and ischemic brain damage usually rely on measuring the extent of brain necrosis observed on MRI. Nonetheless, clinical observation suggests that patients can exhibit deficits that are more severe than what would be expected based on lesion location and size. This phenomenon is commonly explained as being the result of cortical disconnection. To understand whether disconnection contributes to clinical symptoms, we assessed the relationship between language impairments and structural brain connectivity (the connectome) in patients with chronic aphasia after a stroke. Methods Thirty-nine patients with chronic aphasia underwent language assessment and MRI scanning. Relying on MRI data, we reconstructed the individual connectome from T1-weighted and diffusion tensor imaging. Deterministic fiber tractography was used to assess connectivity between each possible pair of cortical Brodmann areas. Multiple linear regression analyses were performed to evaluate the relationship between language performance and cortical necrosis and cortical disconnection. Results We observed that structural disconnection of Brodmann area 45 (spared by the necrotic tissue) was independently associated with naming performance, controlling for the extent of Brodmann area 45 necrosis (F=4.62; P<0.01; necrosis: =0.43; P=0.03; disconnection =1.21; P<0.001). Conclusions We suggest that cortical disconnection, as measured by the structural connectome, is an independent predictor of naming impairment in patients with chronic aphasia. The full extent of clinically relevant brain damage after an ischemic stroke may be underappreciated by visual inspection of cortical necrosis alone.
引用
收藏
页码:988 / 993
页数:6
相关论文
共 36 条
[1]
Grey and white matter correlates of picture naming: Evidence from a voxel-based lesion analysis of the Boston Naming Test [J].
Baldo, Juliana V. ;
Arevalo, Analia ;
Patterson, Janet P. ;
Dronkers, Nina F. .
CORTEX, 2013, 49 (03) :658-667
[2]
Asymmetry of the structural brain connectome in healthy older adults [J].
Bonilha, Leonardo ;
Nesland, Travis ;
Rorden, Chris ;
Fridriksson, Julius .
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY, 2014, 4
[3]
Subcortical damage and white matter disconnection associated with non-fluent speech [J].
Bonilha, Leonardo ;
Fridriksson, Julius .
BRAIN, 2009, 132
[4]
Caplan LR., 2009, CAPLANS STROKE CLIN
[5]
Stroke Aphasia: 1,500 Consecutive Cases [J].
Croquelois, Alexandre ;
Bogousslavsky, Julien .
CEREBROVASCULAR DISEASES, 2011, 31 (04) :392-399
[6]
Dabul B, 2000, Apraxia battery for adults
[7]
The Connectome Mapper: An Open-Source Processing Pipeline to Map Connectomes with MRI [J].
Daducci, Alessandro ;
Gerhard, Stephan ;
Griffa, Alessandra ;
Lemkaddem, Alia ;
Cammoun, Leila ;
Gigandet, Xavier ;
Meuli, Reto ;
Hagmann, Patric ;
Thiran, Jean-Philippe .
PLOS ONE, 2012, 7 (12)
[8]
APHASIA [J].
DAMASIO, AR .
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 1992, 326 (08) :531-539
[9]
Neural regions essential for distinct cognitive processes underlying picture naming [J].
DeLeon, Jessica ;
Gottesman, Rebecca F. ;
Kleinman, Jonathan T. ;
Newhart, Melissa ;
Davis, Cameron ;
Heidler-Gary, Jennifer ;
Lee, Andrew ;
Hillis, Argye E. .
BRAIN, 2007, 130 :1408-1422
[10]
Paul Broca's historic cases: high resolution MR imaging of the brains of Leborgne and Lelong [J].
Dronkers, N. F. ;
Plaisant, O. ;
Iba-Zizen, M. T. ;
Cabanis, E. A. .
BRAIN, 2007, 130 :1432-1441