Improvement in Aphasia Scores After Stroke Is Well Predicted by Initial Severity

Author:

Lazar Ronald M.1,Minzer Brandon1,Antoniello Daniel1,Festa Joanne R.1,Krakauer John W.1,Marshall Randolph S.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Stroke Division, Columbia University Medical Center, New York, NY.

Abstract

Background and Purpose— Most improvement from poststroke aphasia occurs within the first 3 months, but there remains unexplained variability in recovery. Recently, we reported a strong correlation between initial impairment and change scores in motor recovery at 90 days. We wanted to determine whether aphasia recovery (defined as a change from baseline to 90 days) shows a comparably strong correlation and whether the relation was similar to that in motor recovery. Methods— Twenty-one stroke patients had aphasia scores on the Western Aphasia Battery (WAB) obtained on stroke admission (WAB initial ) and at 90 days (WAB 3 mo ). The relation between actual change (Δ) scores (defined as WAB 3 mo − WAB initial ) and WAB initial was calculated in multiple-regression analysis. Results— Regression analysis demonstrated that WAB initial was highly correlated with ΔWAB ( R 2 =0.81, P <0.001) and that, in addition, the relation between WAB initial and ΔWAB was proportional, such that patients recovered 0.73 of maximal potential recovery (WAB maximum −WAB initial ). Conclusions— We show that, like motor recovery, there is a highly predictable relation between aphasia recovery and initial impairment, which is also proportional in nature. The comparability of recovery from motor and language impairment suggests that common mechanisms may govern reduction of poststroke neurologic impairment across different functional domains and that they could be the focus of therapeutic intervention.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)

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