Literature DB >> 20719532

Poststroke aphasia recovery assessed with functional magnetic resonance imaging and a picture identification task.

Jerzy P Szaflarski1, Kenneth Eaton, Angel L Ball, Christi Banks, Jennifer Vannest, Jane B Allendorfer, Stephen Page, Scott K Holland.   

Abstract

Stroke patients often display deficits in language function, such as correctly naming objects. Our aim was to evaluate the reliability and the patterns of poststroke language recovery using a picture identification task during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) at 4 T. Four healthy subjects and 4 subjects with left middle cerebral artery stroke with chronic (>1 year) aphasia were enrolled in the study. In each subject, 10 fMRI scans were performed over a 10-week period using a picture-identification task. The active condition involved presenting subject with a panel of 4 figures (eg, drawings of 4 animals) every 6 seconds and asking the subject to indicate which figure matched the written name in the center. The control condition was a same/different judgment task with pairs of geometric figures (squares, octagons, or combination) presented every 6 seconds. Thirty-second active/control blocks were repeated 5 times each, and responses were recorded. The stoke subjects and controls had similar demographic characteristics, including age (46 vs 53 years), personal handedness (Edinburg Handedness Inventory, 89 vs 95), familial handedness (93 vs 95), and years of education (14.3 vs 14.8). For the active condition, the controls performed better than the stroke subjects (97.7% vs 89.1%; P < .001); the 2 groups performed similarly for the control condition (99.5% vs 98.8%; P = .23). On fMRI, the controls exhibited bilateral, L > R positive blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) activations in frontal and temporal language areas and symmetric retrosplenial and posterior cingulate areas and symmetric negative BOLD activations in bilateral frontotemporal language networks. In contrast, the stroke subjects exhibited positive BOLD activations predominantly in peristroke areas and negative BOLD activations in the unaffected (right) hemisphere. Both groups displayed high activation reliability (as measured by the intraclass correlation coefficient [ICC]) in the left frontal and temporal language areas, although in the stroke subjects the ICC in the frontal regions was spread over a much larger peristroke area. This study documents the utility of the picture-identification task for poststroke language recovery evaluation. Our data suggest that adult stroke patients use functional peristroke areas to perform language functions.
Copyright © 2011 National Stroke Association. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20719532      PMCID: PMC2990790          DOI: 10.1016/j.jstrokecerebrovasdis.2010.02.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Stroke Cerebrovasc Dis        ISSN: 1052-3057            Impact factor:   2.136


  55 in total

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2.  Aphasia in acute stroke and relation to outcome.

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4.  Constraint-induced therapy of chronic aphasia after stroke.

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5.  Contribution of the left and right inferior frontal gyrus in recovery from aphasia. A functional MRI study in stroke patients with preserved hemodynamic responsiveness.

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6.  Language lateralization in healthy right-handers.

Authors:  S Knecht; M Deppe; B Dräger; L Bobe; H Lohmann; E Ringelstein; H Henningsen
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7.  Cortical language activation in stroke patients recovering from aphasia with functional MRI.

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9.  Recovery from moderate aphasia in the first year poststroke: effect of type of therapy.

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2.  The feasibility of improving discourse in people with aphasia through AAC: Clinical and functional MRI correlates.

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3.  Excitatory repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation induces improvements in chronic post-stroke aphasia.

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4.  Recovered vs. not-recovered from post-stroke aphasia: the contributions from the dominant and non-dominant hemispheres.

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6.  Different patterns of language activation in post-stroke aphasia are detected by overt and covert versions of the verb generation fMRI task.

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Review 7.  The neural and neurocomputational bases of recovery from post-stroke aphasia.

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8.  Absence of Perilesional Neuroplastic Recruitment in Chronic Poststroke Aphasia.

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Review 9.  Central Nervous System Plasticity Influences Language and Cognitive Recovery in Adult Glioma.

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10.  Intermittent Theta Burst Stimulation (iTBS) for Treatment of Chronic Post-Stroke Aphasia: Results of a Pilot Randomized, Double-Blind, Sham-Controlled Trial.

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