| Literature DB >> 30972004 |
Mathew Yarossi1,2, Jigna Patel3, Qinyin Qiu3, Supriya Massood4, Gerard Fluet3, Alma Merians3, Sergei Adamovich3,5, Eugene Tunik1,6,7.
Abstract
Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) induced motor evoked potentials (MEPs) are an established proxy of corticospinal excitability. As a binary measure, the presence (MEP+) or absence (MEP-) of ipsilesional hemisphere MEPs early following stroke is a robust indicator of long-term recovery, however this measure does not provide information about spatial cortical reorganization. MEPs have been systematically acquired over the sensorimotor cortex to "map" motor topography. In this investigation we compared the degree to which functional improvements resulting from early (<3 months post-stroke) intensive hand focused upper limb rehabilitation correlate with changes in motor topography between MEP+ and MEP- individuals. Following informed consent, 17 individuals (4 Female, 60.3 ± 9.4 years, 24.6 ± 24.01 days post first time stroke) received 8 one hour-sessions of training with virtual reality (VR)/Robotic simulations. Clinical tests [Box and Blocks Test (BBT), Wolf Motor Function Test (WMFT), Upper Extremity Fugl-Meyer (UEFMA)], kinematic and kinetic assessments [finger Active Range of Motion (finger AROM), Maximum Pinch Force (MPF)], and bilateral TMS mapping of 5 hand muscles were performed prior to (PRE), directly following (POST), and 1 month following (1M) training. Participants were divided into two groups (MEP+, MEP-) based on whether an MEP was present in the affected first dorsal interosseous (FDI) at any time point. MEP+ individuals improved significantly more than MEP- individuals from PRE to 1M on the WMFT, BBT, and finger AROM scores. Ipsilesional hemisphere FDI area increased significantly with time in the MEP+ group. FDI area of the contralesional hemisphere was not significantly different across time points or groups. In the MEP+ group, significant correlations were observed between PRE-1M changes in ipsilesional FDI area and WMFT, BBT, and finger AROM, and contralesional FDI area and UEFMA and MPF. In the MEP- group, no significant correlations were found between changes in contralesional FDI area and functional outcomes. We report preliminary evidence in a small sample that patterns of recovery and the association of recovery to bilateral changes in motor topography may depend on integrity of the ipsilesional cortical spinal tract as assessed by the presence of TMS evoked MEPs.Entities:
Keywords: robotics; stroke; subacute; transcranial magnetic stimulation; upper limb; virtual reality
Year: 2019 PMID: 30972004 PMCID: PMC6443957 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2019.00258
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1NJIT-RAVR system.
Figure 3Multiple muscle mapping data for the unaffected hand (contralesional hemisphere) and affected hand (ipsilesional hemisphere) of a representative subject (S1 in Table 1) in the MEP+ group. PRE, POST, and 1M maps are presented for each muscle.
Participant characteristics.
| S1 | MEP+ | 62 | F | 39 | 25/Mod | R parietal |
| S2 | MEP+ | 62 | M | 92 | 27/Mod | R MCA |
| S3 | MEP+ | 45 | M | 12 | 32/Mod | L Putamen |
| S4 | MEP+ | 62 | F | 6 | 47/Mod | L MCA |
| S5 | MEP+ | 76 | M | 7 | 33/Mod | R frontal, parietal, temporal |
| S6 | MEP+ | 70 | M | 10 | 37/Mod | R MCA |
| S7 | MEP+ | 60 | M | 7 | 11/Severe | R periventricular white matter |
| S8 | MEP+ | 53 | M | 13 | 21/Mod | L temporal, parietal |
| S9 | MEP+ | 65 | F | 5 | 3/Severe | R pons |
| Mean (SD) | 61.7 (9.0) | 21.2 (28.5) | 26.2 (14.3) | |||
| S10 | MEP– | 76 | M | 54 | 46/Mod | L pons |
| S11 | MEP– | 63 | M | 68 | 41/Mod | R pons |
| S12 | MEP– | 64 | M | 29 | 44/Mod | R - unknown |
| S13 | MEP– | 43 | F | 7 | 31/Mod | L MCA/ACA |
| S14 | MEP– | 66 | M | 10 | 3/Severe | R basal ganglia |
| S15 | MEP– | 53 | M | 7 | 4/Severe | L MCA |
| S16 | MEP– | 55 | M | 9 | 2/Severe | R PLIC |
| S17 | MEP– | 51 | M | 44 | 6/Severe | R basal ganglia |
| Mean (SD) | 58.9 (10.4) | 28.50 (24.2) | 22.1 (20.2) |
Based on Woodbury et al. (.
Mixed factorial ANOVA outcomes for MEP+ and MEP- groups compared across time on clinical, kinematic, and kinetic measures.
| Log | |||
| BBT | |||
| UEFMA | |||
| Finger | |||
| Max |
Greenhouse Geisser corrected.
Post hoc outcomes on clinical, kinematic, and kinetic measures for PRE – POST and PRE – 1M change scores between groups.
| Log | ||
| BBT | ||
| UEFMA | ||
| Finger | ||
| Max |
Levene's test for equality of variances significant.
Figure 2FDI resting motor threshold for all groups [Ipsilesional Hemisphere (IH), Contralesional Hemisphere (CH)]. Individuals who were MEP+ at baseline are denoted with triangle markers, individuals who converted to MEP+ at POST or 1M are denoted with square markers, and MEP- individuals are denoted by circular markers.
Figure 4Excitable cortical area for each muscle. Intrinsic muscle map area in the ipsilesional hemisphere of MEP+ participants increased significantly over the measured time period. Changes were less notable, or absent in the contralesional hemisphere for both groups. (*) indicates significant differences between time points (p < 0.05).
Figure 5Clinical, kinematic, and FDI area changes for all groups [Ipsilesional Hemisphere (IH), Contralesional Hemisphere (CH)]. Individuals who were MEP+ at baseline are denoted with triangle markers, individuals who converted to MEP+ at POST or 1M are denoted with square markers, and MEP− individuals are denoted by circular markers. PRE to 1 Month change in FDI area (top row) was correlated to the change in WMFT (2nd row), BBT (3rd row), UEFMA (4th row), finger AROM (5th row), and MPF (6th row). Significant correlations are indicated in bold.