Literature DB >> 9660377

Bilateral hemispheric activation in the early recovery of motor function after stroke.

M Silvestrini1, L M Cupini, F Placidi, M Diomedi, G Bernardi.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND
PURPOSE: Functional recovery after cerebral infarction is a complex phenomenon that depends on various factors. The aim of this study was to investigate changes in cerebral perfusion during motor activity in stroke patients with very early recovery of motor function.
METHODS: We included 9 consecutive patients hospitalized for acute-onset hemiparesis who showed complete functional recovery within 24 hours. CT of the brain showed an ischemic or hemorrhagic cerebral lesion in areas compatible with the symptomatology. Within 36 hours (range, 28 to 36) all patients were examined for the effects of a thumb-to-finger opposition task on cerebral blood flow in the middle cerebral arteries, evaluated by means of bilateral transcranial Doppler ultrasonography. Data were compared with those of 9 healthy subjects matched for age and sex. In patients, the evaluation was repeated 2 to 4 months later.
RESULTS: A comparable increase in flow velocity (% mean+/-SD) was observed with respect to baseline in the contralateral middle cerebral artery during motor activity with patients' normal (8.8+/-2.0%) and recovered hand (9.7+/-4.1%) and with both hands of control subjects (10.6+/-1.4%). In the middle cerebral artery ipsilateral to the hand performing the motor task, the increase in flow velocity was significantly higher (P<0.0001) during movement of the recovered hand in patients (8.6+/-2.7%) than during movement of the normal hand in both patients (2.6+/-1.6%) and control subjects (1.4+/-0.7%). In patients, pattern of changes in flow velocity during motor performance remained the same in the second evaluation.
CONCLUSIONS: These observations suggest that areas of the healthy hemisphere can be activated soon after a focal injury and contribute to the positive evolution of a functional deficit in some patients. This phenomenon of ipsilateral activation cannot be considered transient because it is evident months after stroke onset.

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Mesh:

Year:  1998        PMID: 9660377     DOI: 10.1161/01.str.29.7.1305

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stroke        ISSN: 0039-2499            Impact factor:   7.914


  9 in total

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