4.7 Article

Cortical reorganization after motor stroke: A pilot study on differences between the upper and lower limbs

Journal

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING
Volume 42, Issue 4, Pages 1013-1033

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hbm.25275

Keywords

dynamic causal modeling; effective connectivity; fMRI; interhemispheric inhibition; motor recovery; plasticity; rehabilitation

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [EI 816/4-1, EI 816/6-1, LA 3071/3-1, GR 3285/2-1, GR3285/5-1KFO219-TP8]
  2. European Union Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) [604102]
  3. Helmholtz Portfolio Theme Supercomputing and Modeling for the Human Brain
  4. Marga und Walter Boll-Stiftung
  5. Medical Faculty, University of Cologne [3615/0129/31]
  6. National Institute of Mental Health [R01-MH074457]
  7. SAGE Center for the Study of the Mind and Brain at the University of California, Santa Barbara
  8. University of Cologne Emerging Groups Initiative (CONNECT Group)

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The study found that neural activity underlying movements of the affected hand and foot in well-recovered stroke patients positively correlated with residual motor impairment, with significantly stronger increase in BOLD activity in M1 representations of the affected limb compared to healthy controls. Dynamic causal modeling revealed reduced endogenous connectivity of M1 of both limbs in patients, but no interhemispheric inhibition of the contralesional M1 during movements of the affected hand was detected. Positive interhemispheric M1 coupling was found for movements of the affected foot in both groups.
Stroke patients suffering from hemiparesis may show substantial recovery in the first months poststroke due to neural reorganization. While reorganization driving improvement of upper hand motor function has been frequently investigated, much less is known about the changes underlying recovery of lower limb function. We, therefore, investigated neural network dynamics giving rise to movements of both the hands and feet in 12 well-recovered left-hemispheric chronic stroke patients and 12 healthy participants using a functional magnetic resonance imaging sparse sampling design and dynamic causal modeling (DCM). We found that the level of neural activity underlying movements of the affected right hand and foot positively correlated with residual motor impairment, in both ipsilesional and contralesional premotor as well as left primary motor (M1) regions. Furthermore, M1 representations of the affected limb showed significantly stronger increase in BOLD activity compared to healthy controls and compared to the respective other limb. DCM revealed reduced endogenous connectivity of M1 of both limbs in patients compared to controls. However, when testing for the specific effect of movement on interregional connectivity, interhemispheric inhibition of the contralesional M1 during movements of the affected hand was not detected in patients whereas no differences in condition-dependent connectivity were found for foot movements compared to controls. In contrast, both groups featured positive interhemispheric M1 coupling, that is, facilitation of neural activity, mediating movements of the affected foot. These exploratory findings help to explain why functional recovery of the upper and lower limbs often develops differently after stroke, supporting limb-specific rehabilitative strategies.

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