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2.
Neuroradiology ; 62(12): 1677-1688, 2020 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32812070

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Functional MRI is not routinely used for neurosurgical planning despite potential important advantages, due to difficulty of determining quality. We introduce a novel method for objective evaluation of fMRI scan quality, based on activation maps. A template matching analysis (TMA) is presented and tested on data from two clinical fMRI protocols, performed by healthy controls in seven clinical centers. Preliminary clinical utility is tested with data from low-grade glioma patients. METHODS: Data were collected from 42 healthy subjects from seven centers, with standardized finger tapping (FT) and verb generation (VG) tasks. Copies of these "typical" data were deliberately analyzed incorrectly to assess feasibility of identifying them as "atypical." Analyses of the VG task administered to 32 tumor patients assessed sensitivity of the TMA method to anatomical abnormalities. RESULTS: TMA identified all atypical activity maps for both tasks, at the cost of incorrectly classifying 3.6 (VG)-6.5% (FT) of typical maps as atypical. For patients, the average TMA was significantly higher than atypical healthy scans, despite localized anatomical abnormalities caused by a tumor. CONCLUSION: This study supports feasibility of TMA for objective identification of atypical activation patterns for motor and verb generation fMRI protocols. TMA can facilitate the use and evaluation of clinical fMRI in hospital settings that have limited access to fMRI experts. In a clinical setting, this method could be applied to automatically flag fMRI scans showing atypical activation patterns for further investigation to determine whether atypicality is caused by poor scan data quality or abnormal functional topography.


Subject(s)
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Neuroimaging/methods , Adolescent , Adult , Brain Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Brain Neoplasms/physiopathology , Europe , Feasibility Studies , Female , Glioma/diagnostic imaging , Glioma/physiopathology , Healthy Volunteers , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Proof of Concept Study , Task Performance and Analysis
3.
PLoS One ; 13(8): e0202504, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30138409

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To examine longitudinal changes in structural and functional connectivity post-stroke in patients with motor impairment, and define their importance for recovery and outcome at 12 months. METHODS: First-time stroke patients (N = 31) were studied at 1-2 weeks, 3 months, and 12 months post-injury with a validated motor battery and resting-state fMRI to measure inter-hemispheric functional connectivity (FC). Fractional anisotropy (FA) of the cortico-spinal tract (CST) was derived from diffusion tensor imaging as a measure of white matter organization. ANOVAs were used to test for changes in FC, FA, and motor performance scores over time, and regression analysis related motor outcome to clinical and neuroimaging variables. RESULTS: FA of the ipsilesional CST improved significantly from 3 to 12 months and was strongly correlated with motor performance. FA improved even in the absence of direct damage to the CST. Inter-hemispheric FC also improved over time, but did not correlate with motor performance at 12 months. Clinical variables (early motor score, education level, and age) predicted 80.4% of the variation of motor outcome, and FA increased the predictability to 84.6%. FC did not contribute to the prediction of motor outcome. CONCLUSIONS: Stroke causes changes to the CST microstructure that can account for behavioral variability even in the absence of demonstrable lesion. Ipsilesional CST undergoes remodeling post-stroke, even past the three-month window when most of the motor recovery happens. FA of the CST, but not inter-hemispheric FC, can improve to the prediction of motor outcome based on early motor scores.


Subject(s)
Diffusion Tensor Imaging , Motor Disorders , Recovery of Function , Spinal Cord , Stroke , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Motor Disorders/diagnostic imaging , Motor Disorders/etiology , Motor Disorders/physiopathology , Motor Disorders/therapy , Prospective Studies , Spinal Cord/diagnostic imaging , Spinal Cord/physiopathology , Stroke/complications , Stroke/diagnostic imaging , Stroke/physiopathology , Stroke/therapy
4.
Cortex ; 101: 44-59, 2018 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29414460

ABSTRACT

Studies of stroke have identified local reorganization in perilesional tissue. However, because the brain is highly networked, strokes also broadly alter the brain's global network organization. Here, we assess brain network structure longitudinally in adult stroke patients using resting state fMRI. The topology and boundaries of cortical regions remain grossly unchanged across recovery. In contrast, the modularity of brain systems i.e. the degree of integration within and segregation between networks, was significantly reduced sub-acutely (n = 107), but partially recovered by 3 months (n = 85), and 1 year (n = 67). Importantly, network recovery correlated with recovery from language, spatial memory, and attention deficits, but not motor or visual deficits. Finally, in-depth single subject analyses were conducted using tools for visualization of changes in brain networks over time. This exploration indicated that changes in modularity during successful recovery reflect specific alterations in the relationships between different networks. For example, in a patient with left temporo-parietal stroke and severe aphasia, sub-acute loss of modularity reflected loss of association between frontal and temporo-parietal regions bi-hemispherically across multiple modules. These long-distance connections then returned over time, paralleling aphasia recovery. This work establishes the potential importance of normalization of large-scale modular brain systems in stroke recovery.


Subject(s)
Brain Mapping , Brain/physiopathology , Nerve Net/physiopathology , Recovery of Function/physiology , Stroke Rehabilitation , Stroke/physiopathology , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Aphasia/physiopathology , Attention , Cognition , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Language , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Neuropsychological Tests , Prospective Studies , Spatial Memory , Young Adult
5.
Curr Opin Neurol ; 29(6): 706-713, 2016 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27749394

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: An important challenge in neurology is identifying the neural mechanisms underlying behavioral deficits after brain injury. Here, we review recent advances in understanding the effects of focal brain lesions on brain networks and behavior. RECENT FINDINGS: Neuroimaging studies indicate that the human brain is organized in large-scale resting state networks (RSNs) defined via functional connectivity, that is the temporal correlation of spontaneous activity between different areas. Prior studies showed that focal brain lesion induced behaviorally relevant changes of functional connectivity beyond the site of damage. Recent work indicates that across domains, functional connectivity changes largely conform to two patterns: a reduction in interhemispheric functional connectivity and an increase in intrahemispheric functional connectivity between networks that are normally anticorrelated, for example dorsal attention and default networks. Abnormal functional connectivity can exhibit a high degree of behavioral specificity such that deficits in a given behavioral domain are selectively related to functional connectivity of the corresponding RSN, but some functional connectivity changes allow prediction across domains. Finally, as behavioral recovery proceeds, the prestroke pattern of functional connectivity is restored. SUMMARY: Investigating changes in RSNs may shed light on the neural mechanisms underlying brain dysfunction after stroke. Therefore, resting state functional connectivity may represent an important tool for clinical diagnosis, tracking recovery and rehabilitation.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiopathology , Nerve Net/physiopathology , Stroke/physiopathology , Attention/physiology , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Nerve Net/diagnostic imaging , Neuroimaging , Stroke/diagnostic imaging
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(30): E4367-76, 2016 07 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27402738

ABSTRACT

Deficits following stroke are classically attributed to focal damage, but recent evidence suggests a key role of distributed brain network disruption. We measured resting functional connectivity (FC), lesion topography, and behavior in multiple domains (attention, visual memory, verbal memory, language, motor, and visual) in a cohort of 132 stroke patients, and used machine-learning models to predict neurological impairment in individual subjects. We found that visual memory and verbal memory were better predicted by FC, whereas visual and motor impairments were better predicted by lesion topography. Attention and language deficits were well predicted by both. Next, we identified a general pattern of physiological network dysfunction consisting of decrease of interhemispheric integration and intrahemispheric segregation, which strongly related to behavioral impairment in multiple domains. Network-specific patterns of dysfunction predicted specific behavioral deficits, and loss of interhemispheric communication across a set of regions was associated with impairment across multiple behavioral domains. These results link key organizational features of brain networks to brain-behavior relationships in stroke.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiopathology , Nerve Net/physiopathology , Neural Pathways/physiopathology , Stroke/physiopathology , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Attention/physiology , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Female , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Male , Memory/physiology , Middle Aged , Nerve Net/diagnostic imaging , Neural Pathways/diagnostic imaging , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Rest/physiology , Stroke/diagnostic imaging , Young Adult
7.
Neurology ; 87(2): 198-205, 2016 07 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27306632

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: We investigated whether diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) indices of white matter integrity would offer early markers of retrograde transsynaptic degeneration (RTD) in the visual system after stroke. METHODS: We performed a prospective longitudinal analysis of the sensitivity of DTI markers of optic tract health in 12 patients with postsynaptic visual pathway stroke, 12 stroke controls, and 28 healthy controls. We examined group differences in (1) optic tract fractional anisotropy (FA-asymmetry), (2) perimetric measures of visual impairment, and (3) the relationship between FA-asymmetry and perimetric assessment. RESULTS: FA-asymmetry was higher in patients with visual pathway lesions than in control groups. These differences were evident 3 months from the time of injury and did not change significantly at 12 months. Perimetric measures showed evidence of impairment in participants with visual pathway stroke but not in control groups. A significant association was observed between FA-asymmetry and perimetric measures at 3 months, which persisted at 12 months. CONCLUSIONS: DTI markers of RTD are apparent 3 months from the time of injury. This represents the earliest noninvasive evidence of RTD in any species. Furthermore, these measures associate with measures of visual impairment. DTI measures offer a reproducible, noninvasive, and sensitive method of investigating RTD and its role in visual impairment.


Subject(s)
Neurodegenerative Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Visual Pathways/diagnostic imaging , White Matter/diagnostic imaging , Adult , Aged , Brain Ischemia/complications , Brain Ischemia/diagnostic imaging , Brain Ischemia/physiopathology , Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Diffusion Tensor Imaging , Female , Humans , Intracranial Hemorrhages/complications , Intracranial Hemorrhages/diagnostic imaging , Intracranial Hemorrhages/physiopathology , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Middle Aged , Neurodegenerative Diseases/etiology , Neurodegenerative Diseases/physiopathology , Prospective Studies , Stroke/complications , Stroke/diagnostic imaging , Stroke/physiopathology , Vision Disorders/diagnostic imaging , Vision Disorders/etiology , Vision Disorders/physiopathology , Visual Field Tests , Visual Pathways/physiopathology , White Matter/physiopathology
8.
Ann Neurol ; 80(1): 127-41, 2016 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27277836

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: We recently reported that spatial and nonspatial attention deficits in stroke patients with hemispatial neglect are correlated at 2 weeks postonset with widespread alterations of interhemispheric and intrahemispheric functional connectivity (FC) measured with resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging across multiple brain networks. The mechanisms underlying neglect recovery are largely unknown. In this study, we test the hypothesis that recovery of hemispatial neglect correlates with a return of network connectivity toward a normal pattern, herein defined as "network normalization." METHODS: We measured attention deficits with a neuropsychological battery and FC in a large cohort of stroke patients at, on average, 2 weeks (n = 99), 3 months (n = 77), and 12 months (n = 64) postonset. The relationship between behavioral improvement and changes in FC was analyzed both in terms of a priori regions and networks known to be abnormal subacutely and in a data-driven manner. RESULTS: Attention deficit recovery was mostly complete by 3 months and was significantly correlated with a normalization of abnormal FC across many networks. Improvement of attention deficits, independent of initial severity, was correlated with improvements of previously depressed interhemispheric FC across attention, sensory, and motor networks, and a restoration of the normal anticorrelation between dorsal attention/motor regions and default-mode/frontoparietal regions, particularly in the damaged hemisphere. INTERPRETATION: These results demonstrate that abnormal network connectivity in hemispatial neglect is behaviorally relevant. A return toward normal network interactions, and presumably optimal information processing, is therefore a systems-level mechanism that is associated with improvements of attention over time after focal injury. Ann Neurol 2016;80:127-141.


Subject(s)
Neural Pathways/physiology , Perceptual Disorders/physiopathology , Recovery of Function/physiology , Stroke/physiopathology , Female , Functional Neuroimaging , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Neuropsychological Tests , Perceptual Disorders/complications , Stroke/complications
9.
Brain ; 139(Pt 7): 2024-38, 2016 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27225794

ABSTRACT

Strokes often cause multiple behavioural deficits that are correlated at the population level. Here, we show that motor and attention deficits are selectively associated with abnormal patterns of resting state functional connectivity in the dorsal attention and motor networks. We measured attention and motor deficits in 44 right hemisphere-damaged patients with a first-time stroke at 1-2 weeks post-onset. The motor battery included tests that evaluated deficits in both upper and lower extremities. The attention battery assessed both spatial and non-spatial attention deficits. Summary measures for motor and attention deficits were identified through principal component analyses on the raw behavioural scores. Functional connectivity in structurally normal cortex was estimated based on the temporal correlation of blood oxygenation level-dependent signals measured at rest with functional magnetic resonance imaging. Any correlation between motor and attention deficits and between functional connectivity in the dorsal attention network and motor networks that might spuriously affect the relationship between each deficit and functional connectivity was statistically removed. We report a double dissociation between abnormal functional connectivity patterns and attention and motor deficits, respectively. Attention deficits were significantly more correlated with abnormal interhemispheric functional connectivity within the dorsal attention network than motor networks, while motor deficits were significantly more correlated with abnormal interhemispheric functional connectivity patterns within the motor networks than dorsal attention network. These findings indicate that functional connectivity patterns in structurally normal cortex following a stroke link abnormal physiology in brain networks to the corresponding behavioural deficits.


Subject(s)
Attention/physiology , Brain Mapping/methods , Cognitive Dysfunction/physiopathology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Movement Disorders/physiopathology , Nerve Net/physiopathology , Perceptual Disorders/physiopathology , Stroke/physiopathology , Adult , Aged , Cognitive Dysfunction/diagnostic imaging , Cognitive Dysfunction/etiology , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Movement Disorders/diagnostic imaging , Movement Disorders/etiology , Nerve Net/diagnostic imaging , Perceptual Disorders/diagnostic imaging , Perceptual Disorders/etiology , Stroke/complications , Stroke/diagnostic imaging , Young Adult
10.
J Cereb Blood Flow Metab ; 36(12): 2162-2176, 2016 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26661223

ABSTRACT

Stroke disrupts the brain's vascular supply, not only within but also outside areas of infarction. We investigated temporal delays (lag) in resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging signals in 130 stroke patients scanned two weeks, three months and 12 months post stroke onset. Thirty controls were scanned twice at an interval of three months. Hemodynamic lag was determined using cross-correlation with the global gray matter signal. Behavioral performance in multiple domains was assessed in all patients. Regional cerebral blood flow and carotid patency were assessed in subsets of the cohort using arterial spin labeling and carotid Doppler ultrasonography. Significant hemodynamic lag was observed in 30% of stroke patients sub-acutely. Approximately 10% of patients showed lag at one-year post-stroke. Hemodynamic lag corresponded to gross aberrancy in functional connectivity measures, performance deficits in multiple domains and local and global perfusion deficits. Correcting for lag partially normalized abnormalities in measured functional connectivity. Yet post-stroke FC-behavior relationships in the motor and attention systems persisted even after hemodynamic delays were corrected. Resting state fMRI can reliably identify areas of hemodynamic delay following stroke. Our data reveal that hemodynamic delay is common sub-acutely, alters functional connectivity, and may be of clinical importance.


Subject(s)
Hemodynamics/physiology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Stroke/physiopathology , Adult , Attention , Brain/blood supply , Brain/physiopathology , Case-Control Studies , Cerebrovascular Circulation , Humans , Motor Activity , Neural Pathways , Stroke/psychology
11.
Neuron ; 85(5): 927-41, 2015 Mar 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25741721

ABSTRACT

A long-held view is that stroke causes many distinct neurological syndromes due to damage of specialized cortical and subcortical centers. However, it is unknown if a syndrome-based description is helpful in characterizing behavioral deficits across a large number of patients. We studied a large prospective sample of first-time stroke patients with heterogeneous lesions at 1-2 weeks post-stroke. We measured behavior over multiple domains and lesion anatomy with structural MRI and a probabilistic atlas of white matter pathways. Multivariate methods estimated the percentage of behavioral variance explained by structural damage. A few clusters of behavioral deficits spanning multiple functions explained neurological impairment. Stroke topography was predominantly subcortical, and disconnection of white matter tracts critically contributed to behavioral deficits and their correlation. The locus of damage explained more variance for motor and language than memory or attention deficits. Our findings highlight the need for better models of white matter damage on cognition.


Subject(s)
Brain Mapping/methods , Nerve Fibers, Myelinated/pathology , Perceptual Disorders/diagnosis , Perceptual Disorders/psychology , Stroke/diagnosis , Stroke/psychology , Databases, Factual/trends , Female , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Male , Mental Disorders/diagnosis , Mental Disorders/metabolism , Mental Disorders/psychology , Middle Aged , Nerve Fibers, Myelinated/metabolism , Perceptual Disorders/metabolism , Prospective Studies , Stroke/metabolism
12.
Brain ; 137(Pt 12): 3267-83, 2014 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25367028

ABSTRACT

The relationship between spontaneous brain activity and behaviour following focal injury is not well understood. Here, we report a large-scale study of resting state functional connectivity MRI and spatial neglect following stroke in a large (n=84) heterogeneous sample of first-ever stroke patients (within 1-2 weeks). Spatial neglect, which is typically more severe after right than left hemisphere injury, includes deficits of spatial attention and motor actions contralateral to the lesion, and low general attention due to impaired vigilance/arousal. Patients underwent structural and resting state functional MRI scans, and spatial neglect was measured using the Posner spatial cueing task, and Mesulam and Behavioural Inattention Test cancellation tests. A principal component analysis of the behavioural tests revealed a main factor accounting for 34% of variance that captured three correlated behavioural deficits: visual neglect of the contralesional visual field, visuomotor neglect of the contralesional field, and low overall performance. In an independent sample (21 healthy subjects), we defined 10 resting state networks consisting of 169 brain regions: visual-fovea and visual-periphery, sensory-motor, auditory, dorsal attention, ventral attention, language, fronto-parietal control, cingulo-opercular control, and default mode. We correlated the neglect factor score with the strength of resting state functional connectivity within and across the 10 resting state networks. All damaged brain voxels were removed from the functional connectivity:behaviour correlational analysis. We found that the correlated behavioural deficits summarized by the factor score were associated with correlated multi-network patterns of abnormal functional connectivity involving large swaths of cortex. Specifically, dorsal attention and sensory-motor networks showed: (i) reduced interhemispheric functional connectivity; (ii) reduced anti-correlation with fronto-parietal and default mode networks in the right hemisphere; and (iii) increased intrahemispheric connectivity with the basal ganglia. These patterns of functional connectivity:behaviour correlations were stronger in patients with right- as compared to left-hemisphere damage and were independent of lesion volume. Our findings identify large-scale changes in resting state network interactions that are a physiological signature of spatial neglect and may relate to its right hemisphere lateralization.


Subject(s)
Attention/physiology , Brain Mapping , Functional Laterality/physiology , Nerve Net/physiopathology , Perceptual Disorders/physiopathology , Space Perception , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Neural Pathways/pathology , Stroke/physiopathology , Young Adult
13.
Front Neurosci ; 4: 198, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21165175

ABSTRACT

Brain-computer interfacing (BCI) is a steadily growing area of research. While initially BCI research was focused on applications for paralyzed patients, increasingly more alternative applications in healthy human subjects are proposed and investigated. In particular, monitoring of mental states and decoding of covert user states have seen a strong rise of interest. Here, we present some examples of such novel applications which provide evidence for the promising potential of BCI technology for non-medical uses. Furthermore, we discuss distinct methodological improvements required to bring non-medical applications of BCI technology to a diversity of layperson target groups, e.g., ease of use, minimal training, general usability, short control latencies.

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