4.4 Article

White matter tract disruption is associated with ipsilateral hand impairment in subacute stroke: a diffusion MRI study

Journal

NEURORADIOLOGY
Volume 64, Issue 8, Pages 1605-1615

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00234-022-02927-8

Keywords

Less-affected hand; Ipsilateral pyramidal tract; Contralesional hemisphere; Sensorimotor systems; Structural Connectivity

Funding

  1. platform of France Life Imaging network [ANR-11-INBS-0006]

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The impairment of the ipsilateral hand after stroke is associated with cumulative white matter disruption in both ipsilateral and contralesional tracts, influenced by task-related processes.
Purpose The ipsilateral hand (ILH) is impaired after unilateral stroke, but the underlying mechanisms remain unresolved. Based on the degeneracy theory of network connectivity that many connectivity patterns are functionally equivalent, we hypothesized that ILH impairment would result from the summation of microstructural white matter (WM) disruption in the motor network, with a task-related profile. We aimed to determine the WM disruption patterns associated with ILH impairment. Methods This was a cross-sectional analysis of patients in the ISIS-HERMES Study with ILH and diffusion-MRI data collected 1 month post-stroke. Patients performed three tasks, the Purdue Pegboard Test (PPT), handgrip strength, and movement time. Fractional anisotropy (FA) derived from diffusion MRI was measured in 33 WM regions. We used linear regression models controlling for age, sex, and education to determine WM regions associated with ILH impairment. Results PPT was impaired in 42%, grip in 59%, and movement time in 24% of 29 included patients (mean age, 51.9 +10.5 years; 21 men). PPT was predicted by ipsilesional corticospinal tract (i-CST) (B = 17.95; p =0.002) and superior longitudinal Fasciculus (i-SLF) (B = 20.52; p = 0.008); handgrip by i-CST (B = 109.58; p = 0.016) and contralesional anterior corona radiata (B = 42.69; p = 0.039); and movement time by the corpus callosum (B= - 1810.03; p = 0.003) i-SLF (B = - 917.45; p = 0.015), contralesional pons-CST (B = 1744.31; p = 0.016), and i-corticoreticulospinal pathway (B = - 380.54; p = 0.037). Conclusion ILH impairment was associated with WM disruption to a combination of ipsilateral and contralesional tracts with a pattern influenced by task-related processes, supporting the degeneracy theory. We propose to integrate ILH assessment in rehabilitation programs and treatment interventions such as neuromodulation.

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