Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Upper Limb Recovery After Stroke Is Associated With Ipsilesional Primary Motor Cortical Activity: A Meta-Analysis

 What did your competent? doctor do with this in the last 10 years? Or didn't your upper limb recover because your DOCTOR DID NOTHING?

ipsilesional (not comparable) (pathology, medicine) On the same side as a lesion. So your damaged side was not that badly damaged so it still partly works, did your doctor inform you of that?

Do you prefer your  doctor  incompetence NOT KNOWING? OR NOT DOING?

Upper Limb Recovery After Stroke Is Associated With Ipsilesional Primary Motor Cortical Activity: A Meta-Analysis

Isabelle Favre, MD; Thomas A. Zeffiro, MD, PhD; Olivier Detante, MD, PhD; Alexandre Krainik, MD, PhD; Marc Hommel, MD; Assia Jaillard, MD, PhD Received August 12, 2013; 
 
Background and Purpose 
 
Although neuroimaging studies have revealed specific patterns of reorganization in the sensorimotor control network after stroke, their role in recovery remains unsettled. To review the existing evidence systematically, we performed activation likelihood estimation meta-analysis of functional neuroimaging studies investigating upper limb movement-related brain activity after stroke.  
 
Methods 
 
Twenty-four studies using sensorimotor tasks in standardized coordinates were included, totaling 255 patients and 145 healthy controls. Across the entire brain, we compared task-related activity patterns in good and poor recovery and assessed the magnitude of spatial shifts in sensorimotor activity in cortical motor areas after stroke.  
 
Results 
 
When compared with healthy controls, patients showed higher activation likelihood estimation values in contralesional primary motor soon after stroke that abated with time, but were not related to motor outcome. The observed activity changes were consistent with restoration of typical interhemispheric balance. In contrast, activation likelihood estimation values in ipsilesional medial-premotor and primary motor cortex were associated with good outcome, reorganization that may reflect vicarious processes associated with ventral activity shifts from BA4a to 4p. In the anterior cerebellum, a novel finding was the association of poor recovery with increased vermal activity, possibly reflecting behaviorally inadequate compensatory strategies engaging the fastigio-thalamo-cortical and corticoreticulospinal systems.  
 
Conclusions 
 
Activity in ipsilesional primary motor and medial-premotor cortices in chronic stroke signals good motor recovery, whereas cerebellar vermis activity signals poor recovery. Functional MRI may be useful in identifying recovery biomarkers. (Stroke. 2014;45:1077-1083.)

No comments:

Post a Comment