Tuesday, May 21, 2024

Primary Motor Cortex in Stroke: A Functional MRI-Guided Proton MR Spectroscopic Study

 My conclusion is that NOTHING HERE WILL GET SURVIVORS RECOVERED! I'd fire all of you.

Primary Motor Cortex in Stroke: A Functional MRI-Guided Proton MR Spectroscopic Study

Carmen M. Cirstea, MD, PhD; William M. Brooks, PhD; Sorin C. Craciunas, MD; Elena A. Popescu, PhD; In-Young Choi, PhD; Phil Lee, PhD; Ali Bani-Ahmed, BSc; Hung-Wen Yeh, PhD; Cary R. Savage, PhD; Leonardo G. Cohen, MD; Randolph J. Nudo, PhD  
 
 
Background and Purpose 
 
Our goal was to investigate whether certain metabolites, specific to neurons, glial cells, or the neuronal– glial neurotransmission system, in primary motor cortices (M1), are altered and correlated with clinical motor severity in chronic stroke. 
 
  Methods
 
 Fourteen survivors of a single ischemic stroke located outside the M1 and 14 age-matched healthy control subjects were included. At 6 months after stroke, N-acetylaspartate, myo-inositol, and glutamate/glutamine were measured using proton magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (in-plane resolution=5x5 mm 2 ) in radiologically normal-appearing gray matter of the hand representation area, identified by functional MRI, in each M1. Metabolite concentrations and analyses of metabolite correlations within M1 were determined. Relationships between metabolite concentrations and arm motor impairment were also evaluated. 
 
 Results
 
 The stroke survivors showed lower N-acetylaspartate and higher myo-inositol across ipsilesional and contralesional M1 compared with control subjects. Significant correlations between N-acetylaspartate and glutamate/glutamine were found in either M1. Ipsilesional N-acetylaspartate and glutamate/glutamine were positively correlated with arm motor impairment and contralesional N-acetylaspartate with time after stroke.  
 
Conclusions 
 
Our preliminary data demonstrated significant alterations of neuronal glial interactions in spared M1 with the ipsilesional alterations related to stroke severity and contralesional alterations to stroke duration. Thus, MR spectroscopy might be a sensitive method to quantify relevant metabolite changes after stroke and consequently increase our knowledge of the factors leading from these changes in spared motor cortex to motor impairment after stroke. (Stroke. 2011;42:1004-1009.)

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