Jun Yup Kim1,2, Seo Yeon Yoon3, Jinna Kim4, Yong Wook Kim5. 1. Veterans Medical Research Institute, Veterans Health Service Medical Center, Seoul, Republic of Korea. 2. Department of Medicine, Graduate School, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Republic of Korea. 3. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Bundang Jesaeng General Hospital, Seongnam-si, Republic of Korea. 4. Department of Radiology, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Republic of Korea. 5. Department and Research Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Poststroke cricopharyngeal dysfunction has been reported to occur in 50% of brainstem strokes; however, cricopharyngeal dysfunction also occurs commonly in patients with supratentorial stroke. The hemispheric neuroanatomical location of this dysfunction has not been clearly identified. AIM: We aimed to analyze the relationship between cricopharyngeal dysfunction and supratentorial lesion location in poststroke patients through this retrospective case-control voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping study. METHODS: Cricopharyngeal dysfunction was diagnosed when the residue after swallowing (pyriform sinus) accounted for more than 25% of volume of pyriform sinus. Medical records and the video fluoroscopic swallowing studies of first-ever stroke patients who were admitted to our hospital during acute to subacute phase from 2009 to 2019 were reviewed. After propensity score matching to reduce the likelihood of selection bias, 50 patients per group were included in the cricopharyngeal dysfunction and control groups. We used a P threshold of 0.01 corrected for multiple comparisons with permutation thresholding (5000 permutations). Dichotomized diagnosis of cricopharyngeal dysfunction and the magnitude of pyriform sinus were used as dependent variables. RESULTS: Analysis using the Liebermeister statistics indicated that lesions of the right lentiform nucleus were associated with the development of cricopharyngeal dysfunction. After adjustment for age and total lesion volume, which are known effectors for the development of dysphagia, statistically significant correlations were found between pyriform sinus and lesions of the right lentiform nucleus and anterior corona radiata beneath the right middle frontal gyrus. CONCLUSION: Thus, our study demonstrated for the first time that damages to the right lentiform nucleus, especially globus pallidus externa, and anterior corona radiata beneath the right middle frontal gyrus are associated with the development and severity of cricopharyngeal dysfunction.
BACKGROUND: Poststroke cricopharyngeal dysfunction has been reported to occur in 50% of brainstem strokes; however, cricopharyngeal dysfunction also occurs commonly in patients with supratentorial stroke. The hemispheric neuroanatomical location of this dysfunction has not been clearly identified. AIM: We aimed to analyze the relationship between cricopharyngeal dysfunction and supratentorial lesion location in poststroke patients through this retrospective case-control voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping study. METHODS: Cricopharyngeal dysfunction was diagnosed when the residue after swallowing (pyriform sinus) accounted for more than 25% of volume of pyriform sinus. Medical records and the video fluoroscopic swallowing studies of first-ever stroke patients who were admitted to our hospital during acute to subacute phase from 2009 to 2019 were reviewed. After propensity score matching to reduce the likelihood of selection bias, 50 patients per group were included in the cricopharyngeal dysfunction and control groups. We used a P threshold of 0.01 corrected for multiple comparisons with permutation thresholding (5000 permutations). Dichotomized diagnosis of cricopharyngeal dysfunction and the magnitude of pyriform sinus were used as dependent variables. RESULTS: Analysis using the Liebermeister statistics indicated that lesions of the right lentiform nucleus were associated with the development of cricopharyngeal dysfunction. After adjustment for age and total lesion volume, which are known effectors for the development of dysphagia, statistically significant correlations were found between pyriform sinus and lesions of the right lentiform nucleus and anterior corona radiata beneath the right middle frontal gyrus. CONCLUSION: Thus, our study demonstrated for the first time that damages to the right lentiform nucleus, especially globus pallidus externa, and anterior corona radiata beneath the right middle frontal gyrus are associated with the development and severity of cricopharyngeal dysfunction.