| Literature DB >> 26617568 |
Rüdiger J Seitz1, Geoffrey A Donnan2.
Abstract
In acute stroke, the major factor for recovery is the early use of thrombolysis aimed at arterial recanalization and reperfusion of ischemic brain tissue. Subsequently, neurorehabilitative training critically improves clinical recovery due to augmention of postlesional plasticity. Neuroimaging and electrophysiology studies have revealed that the location and volume of the stroke lesion, the affection of nerve fiber tracts, as well as functional and structural changes in the perilesional tissue and in large-scale bihemispheric networks are relevant biomarkers of post-stroke recovery. However, associated disorders, such as mood disorders, epilepsy, and neurodegenerative diseases, may induce secondary cerebral changes or aggravate the functional deficits and, thereby, compromise the potential for recovery.Entities:
Keywords: cerebral ischemia; infarct location; network reorganization; neurorehabilitative training; perilesional plasticity; recovery; stroke associated disturbances; thrombolysis
Year: 2015 PMID: 26617568 PMCID: PMC4641432 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2015.00238
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Successful thrombolysis. (Left) Severe perfusion deficit in the precentral gyrus (red) as assessed in a time-to-peak map before thrombolysis. (Middle) Point-like abnormality in diffusion-weighted imaging at the same time signifying the perfusion–diffusion mismatch. (Right) Two small lesions in diffusion-weighted imaging 24 h after intravenous thrombolysis accompanied by complete recovery from hemiparesis.
Classification of ischemic brain infarcts.
| Type | Infarct location | Pathogenesis | Response to thrombolysis |
|---|---|---|---|
| I.1 | Cortical | Distal branch | Early |
| I.2 | Cortico-subcortical | Proximal branch | Limited |
| II.1 | ±Insula | Infarct core | Early |
| II.2 | +Periventricular white matter | Large lesion | Limited |
| Limited | |||
| III.1 | Fiber tracts | ||
| III.2 | Internal capsule (anterior choroidal artery) | ||
| III.3 | Basal ganglia, lateral thalamus | ||
| III.4 | Medial and anterior thalamus (perforating branches of posterior cerebral artery) | ||
| IV.1 | Cortico-subcortical | Extracranial artery occlusion ± intracranial large artery occlusion ± accompanied by reactive vasodilation | Limited |
| IV.2 | Arterial borderzone | Extracranial artery occlusion |
Adapted from Seitz and Donnan (.
Techniques, actions, and effects of non-invasive stimulation of the human brain.
| Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) | Transcranial electrical stimulation | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single pulse TMS | Paired-pulse TMS | Repetitive TMS | Patterned rTMS | Direct current stimulation tDCS | Alternating current stimulation | Random noise stimulation |
| Intracortical (single coil) | 1 Hz TMS (inhibitory) | Continuous theta-burst stimulation (inhibitory) | Cathodal tDCS | |||
| Cortico-cortical (two coils) | >4 Hz TMS (excitatory) | Intermittent theta-burst stimulation (excitatory) | Anodal tDCS | |||
After Liew et al. (.
Figure 2Striatocapsular stroke (Type II.1) in a patient with persistent hemiplegia. Note the small but complete destruction of the posterior limb of the internal capsule (arrow). Color bar: green fronto-occipital diffusion, red right-left diffusion, blue dorso-ventral diffusion. By permission of Oxford University Press (URL www.oup.com), Free permission Author reusing own material, p. 82 fig: 6.4 (left part) from “Stroke Rehabilitation” edited by Carey and Leeanne (140).
Figure 3Severely reduced spontaneous movement activity in the affected left arm in right hemispheric brain infarct. Shown is the recording time between 4 p.m. until 10 a.m. the following day. The intermittent slow wave activity in electroencephalographic recordings predicted poor motor recovery. Dotted lines indicate seconds. From Ruan and Seitz (174).
Figure 4Gaming-based training scenario using the commercially available hand hold PABLO. Hand movements are measured by acceleration and force sensors and thereby steer objects in virtual reality games. Training on consecutive days enlarged the angle of hand rotations and decreased the heterogeneity of movement execution both in healthy subjects and stroke patients. From Seitz et al. (213).