| Literature DB >> 25121607 |
Jocelyn L Bowden1, Gaven G Lin2, Penelope A McNulty1.
Abstract
Sensation is commonly impaired immediately post-stroke but little is known about the long-term changes in cutaneous sensation that have the capacity to adversely impact independence and motor-function. We investigated cutaneous sensory thresholds across the hand in the chronic post-stroke period. Cutaneous sensation was assessed in 42 community-dwelling stroke patients and compared to 36 healthy subjects. Sensation was tested with calibrated monofilaments at 6 sites on the hand that covered the median, ulnar and radial innervation territories and included both glabrous (hairless) and hairy skin. The motor-function of stroke patients was assessed with the Wolf Motor Function Test and the upper-limb motor Fugl-Meyer Assessment. Impaired cutaneous sensation was defined as monofilament thresholds >3 SD above the mean of healthy subjects and good sensation was ≤ 3 SD. Cutaneous sensation was impaired for 33% of patients and was 40-84% worse on the more-affected side compared to healthy subjects depending on the site (p<0.05). When the stroke patient data were pooled cutaneous sensation fell within the healthy range, although ∼ 1/3 of patients were classified with impaired sensation. Classification by motor-function revealed low levels of impaired sensation. The magnitude of sensory loss was only apparent when the sensory-function of stroke patients was classified as good or impaired. Sensation was most impaired on the dorsum of the hand where age-related changes in monofilament thresholds are minimal in healthy subjects. Although patients with both high and low motor-function had poor cutaneous sensation, overall patients with low motor-function had poorer cutaneous sensation than those with higher motor-function, and relationships were found between motor impairments and sensation at the fingertip and palm. These results emphasize the importance of identifying the presence and magnitude of cutaneous sensory impairments in the chronic period after stroke.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25121607 PMCID: PMC4133225 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0104153
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographic data and motor scores of stroke patients classified by more-affected side motor-ability and sensory function.
| Motor function | Sensory function | |||
| High motor-functiongroup | Low motor-functiongroup | Good sensationgroup | Poor sensationgroup | |
| n | 24 | 18 | 28 | 14 |
| Age (mean, SD) | 62.7±10.2 | 56.7±17.6 | 63.2±11.6 | 53.9±16.5 |
| Sex (male:female) | 17∶7 | 11∶7 | 18∶10 | 10∶4 |
| Months post-stroke (mean, SD) | 21.5±36.5 | 37.2±58.7 | 31.8±56.8 | 21.2±16.5 |
| More-affected side (right:left) | 11∶13 | 7∶11 | 14∶14 | 10∶4 |
| Dominant side affected (n) | 10 | 8 | 13 | 11 |
| Stroke type Ischaemic:hemorrhagic | 19∶5 | 10∶8 | 20∶8 | 9∶5 |
| Wolf Motor Function Test (s) | 4 | 97 [74–113]*** | 12.1 [3.8–70.2 ] | 82 [12–113] |
| Fugl-Meyer Assessment | 57±1.4 | 16±3.2*** | 55 [27–61] | 17 |
Motor-function scores were different between groups (***p<0.001). Fugl-Meyer scores were higher for patients with poor sensation (*p<0.05). Wolf Motor-Function Test data are the mean times for the 15 timed tasks with a maximum time of 120 s per task; maximum Fugl-Meyer score is 66. Data are presented as mean ± SEM or median [IQR].
Figure 1Cutaneous sensation testing sites.
Sites 1–4 reflect glabrous skin and sites 5–6 hairy skin. Sites 1–2 have median nerve innervation, 3–4 ulnar nerve, and 5–6 radial nerve.
Figure 2Cutaneous sensation after stroke and in age- and sex-matched healthy subjects A) Cutaneous sensation according to classification.
Higher numbers represent poorer sensation (higher thresholds), data presented as median and interquartile range on a logarithmic scale (log10). Dashed lines indicate minimum and maximum monofilament size (0.008–300 g). Open circles: less-affected side; filled circles: more-affected side. Open triangles: healthy subjects, combined hands. Regions: f: fingertip; p: palm; and d: dorsum. The zone of impaired sensation is indicated by grey shading (fingertip 0.6 g, palm 1.0 g, see text for details). The left hand panel illustrates a significant positive correlation between the fingertips and palm thresholds for the more-affected side (rs(40) = 0.79, p<0.001); the right hand panel illustrates the correlations for the less-affected side (rs(40) = 0.58, p<0.001), and healthy subjects (rs(34) = 0.64, p<0.001). rs = correlation co-efficient (degrees of freedom).
Correlation between cutaneous thresholds and motor-function tests.
| Test | Fingertip thresholds | Palm thresholds | Dorsum thresholds |
| WMFT time | rs(40) = 0.37 p = 0.018 | rs (40) = 0.33 p = 0.035 | rs (40) = 0.31 p = 0.045 |
| FMA score | rs (40) = −0.45 p = 0.003 | rs (40) = −0.40 p = 0.009 | rs (40) = −0.35 p = 0.025 |
Correlations were performed separately for each test of motor-function. rs = correlation co-efficient (degrees of freedom).