4.5 Article

Poststroke cerebral peduncular atrophy correlates with a measure of corticospinal tract injury-in the cerebral hemisphere

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF NEURORADIOLOGY
Volume 29, Issue 2, Pages 354-358

Publisher

AMER SOC NEURORADIOLOGY
DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A0811

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. NICHD NIH HHS [HD34273, R01 HD034273] Funding Source: Medline

Ask authors/readers for more resources

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Methods have not been well developed and tested to predict the extent of remote degeneration in the central nervous system that follows cerebral infarction. We hypothesized that the extent of infarction overlap with the cerebral hemispheric course of the corticospinal tract (CST) on structural MR imaging predicts the extent of ipsilateral cerebral peduncular atrophy in patients with chronic stroke. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Hemiparetic patients (n = 34) with supratentorial unilateral infarctions who were at least 1 year poststroke onset and enrolled in research protocols of Constraint-Induced Movement therapy underwent volumetric T1 MR imaging of the brain. The following measures were calculated for each patient: 1) the maximal proportion of the CST in the cerebral hemisphere on axial section that was overlapped by infarction, 2) total infarction volume, and 3) the ratio of the crosssectional area of the ipsilateral cerebral peduncle to the area of the contralateral cerebral peduncle (peduncular asymmetry ratio). Correlation analyses evaluated the predictive value of CST injury or infarction volume for the peduncular asymmetry ratio. RESULTS: CST injury correlated significantly with the peduncular asymmetry ratio (r = -0.65; P <.001), whereas infarction volume did not (r = -0.31; P =.09). CONCLUSIONS: The extent of postinfarction CST injury in the cerebral hemisphere predicts the extent of ipsilateral cerebral peduncular atrophy. More generally, the findings suggest that the extent of remote wallerian degeneration of a fiber tract is strongly related to its extent of injury directly at the site of infarction.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available