| Literature DB >> 34652492 |
Martina Conterno1,2, Dorothee Kümmerer3,4, Andrea Dressing3,4,5, Volkmar Glauche3,4, Horst Urbach6, Cornelius Weiller3,4,5, Michel Rijntjes3,4.
Abstract
The anatomical relationship between speech apraxia (SA) and oral apraxia (OA) is still unclear. To shed light on this matter we studied 137 patients with acute ischaemic left-hemisphere stroke and performed support vector regression-based, multivariate lesion-symptom mapping. Thirty-three patients presented with either SA or OA. These two symptoms mostly co-occurred (n = 28), except for few patients with isolated SA (n = 2) or OA (n = 3). All patient with either SA or OA presented with aphasia (p < 0.001) and these symptoms were highly associated with apraxia (p < 0.001). Co-occurring SA and OA were predominantly associated with insular lesions, while the insula was completely spared in the five patients with isolated SA or OA. Isolated SA occurred in case of frontal lesions (prefrontal gyrus and superior longitudinal fasciculus), while isolated OA occurred in case of either temporoparietal or striatocapsular lesions. Our study supports the notion of a predominant, but not exclusive, role of the insula in verbal and non-verbal oral praxis, and indicates that frontal regions may contribute exclusively to verbal oral praxis, while temporoparietal and striatocapsular regions contribute to non-verbal oral praxis. However, since tests for SA and OA so far intrinsically also investigate aphasia and apraxia, refined tests are warranted.Entities:
Keywords: Insula; Multivariate lesion–symptom mapping; Oral apraxia; Precentral gyrus; Speech apraxia; Stroke; Support vector regression
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34652492 PMCID: PMC8803819 DOI: 10.1007/s00221-021-06224-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Brain Res ISSN: 0014-4819 Impact factor: 1.972
Demographic and clinical data
| Demographic and clinical data ( | Mean (SD) | Range | Absolute frequency (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 64.6 (14.5) | 21.9–85.7 | |
| Gender (male) | 89 (65) | ||
| NIHSS at admission | 6.8 (5.6) | 0–24 | |
| NIHSS at discharge | 2.7 (2.8) | 0–15 | |
| Lesion volume (cc) | 25.0 (34.4) | 0.3–244.9 | |
| SA | 30 (22) | ||
| OA | 31 (23) | ||
| Aphasia | 65 (47) | ||
| Impaired comprehension | 53 (421) | ||
| Apraxia | |||
| Impaired pantomime | 35 (282) | ||
| Impaired imitation | 60 (443) | ||
| Dysarthria | 49 (36) |
NIHSS National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale, SD standard deviation
1n = 127; 2n = 126; 3n = 135 (see "Patients")
Characteristics of patients with SA and/or OA
| SA + OA ( | iSA pt. 1 | iSA pt. 2 | iOA pt. 1 | iOA pt. 2 | iOA pt. 3 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) | Range | % | ||||||
| Age | 66.8 (11.9) (n.s.) | 32.8–85.7 | 77.6 | 35.1 | 64.4 | 59.1 | 81.8 | |
| Gender (male) | 71 (n.s.) | + | – | + | + | + | ||
| NIHSS on admission | 11.1 (5.9)* | 3–24 | 4 | 12 | 3 | 15 | 22 | |
| NIHSS on discharge | 5.0 (3.5) * | 1–15 | 2 | 6 | 3 | 3 | 9 | |
| Lesion volume (cc) | 66.9 (51.1)* | 5.9–244.9 | 27.3 | 45.5 | 55.6 | 3.4 | 13.5 | |
| Aphasia | 100* | + | + | + | + | + | ||
Impaired comprehension | 961* | + | + | + | n.t. | + | ||
Impaired pantomime | 812* | – | – | n.t. | – | + | ||
Impaired imitation | 75* | + | – | + | – | + | ||
| Dysarthria | 32 (n.s.) | – | + | – | – | + | ||
The SA + OA group (n = 28) was compared with the rest of the sample using either the χ2 test or the Mann–Whitney U test (* = p < 0.001). For the iSA/iOA patients the absolute values are shown (+ = presence of the symptom, – = absence of the symptom)
N.t. not tested, n.s. not significant, pt. patient, SD standard deviation
1n = 23; 2n = 21 (see "Patients")
Fig. 1Lesion maps and analysis for the SA + OA group. For each slice the MNI coordinate (z) is given. a Lesion overlap of the whole patient sample. The colour bar shows the colour range corresponding to the number of overlapping lesions. b Lesion overlap of the patients with SA + OA (n = 28). The colour bar shows the colour range corresponding to the number of overlapping lesions. c SVR-LSM clusterwise analysis for SA + OA in comparison to the whole sample (n = 137). Six patients were excluded for having no voxels inside the minimum lesion cut-off mask. The resulting SVR-β values were thresholded at p < 0.005 and corrected for cluster size at p < 0.05, both based on 3000 permutations. d SVR-LSM clusterwise analysis for SA + OA within the group of aphasic patients (n = 65), i.e. comparison between the lesions of aphasic patients with SA + OA and the lesions of aphasic patients without SA + OA. One patient was excluded for having no voxels inside the minimum lesion cut-off mask. The resulting SVR-β values were thresholded at p < 0.005 and corrected for cluster size at p < 0.05, both based on 3000 permutations
Fig. 2Lesion maps for iSA and iOA. For each slice the MNI coordinate (z) is given. a Lesion overlap for iSA (2 patients; patient 1 in blue, patient 2 in red, overlap region in pink). b Lesion overlap for iOA (3 patients; patient 1 in blue, patient 2 in green, patient 3 in red, overlap region between patient 2 and 3 in yellow)