Abstract
Background.
Stroke patients with mild-moderate upper extremity motor impairments
and minimal sensory and cognitive deficits provide a useful model to
study recovery and improve rehabilitation. Laboratory-based
investigators use lesioning techniques for similar goals.
Objective.
To determine whether stroke lesions in an upper extremity
rehabilitation trial cohort match lesions from the preclinical stroke
recovery models used to drive translational research. Methods.
Clinical neuroimages from 297 participants enrolled in the
Interdisciplinary Comprehensive Arm Rehabilitation Evaluation (ICARE)
study were reviewed. Images were characterized based on lesion type
(ischemic or hemorrhagic), volume, vascular territory, depth (cortical
gray matter, cortical white matter, subcortical), old strokes, and
leukoaraiosis. Lesions were compared with those of preclinical stroke
models commonly used to study upper limb recovery. Results. Among
the ischemic stroke participants, median infarct volume was 1.8 mL,
with most lesions confined to subcortical structures (61%) including the
anterior choroidal artery territory (30%) and the pons (23%). Of ICARE
participants, <1% had lesions resembling proximal middle cerebral
artery or surface vessel occlusion models. Preclinical models of
subcortical white matter injury best resembled the ICARE population
(33%). Intracranial hemorrhage participants had small (median 12.5 mL)
lesions that best matched the capsular hematoma preclinical model.
Conclusions.
ICARE subjects are not representative of all stroke patients, but they
represent a clinically and scientifically important subgroup. Compared
with lesions in general stroke populations and widely studied animal
models of recovery, ICARE participants had smaller, more subcortically
based strokes. Improved preclinical-clinical translational efforts may
require better alignment of lesions between preclinical and human stroke
recovery models.
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