Macrostructural Cerebellar Neuroplasticity Correlates With Motor Recovery After Stroke

Author:

Hanakawa Takashi123ORCID,Hotta Fujiko3,Nakamura Tatsuhiro12,Shindo Keiichiro34,Ushiba Naoko35,Hirosawa Masaki3,Yamazaki Yutaka3,Moriyama Yoshinao3,Takagi Syota3,Mizuno Katsuhiro67,Liu Meigen6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Integrated Neuroanatomy and Neuroimaging, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoto, Japan

2. Department of Advanced Neuroimaging, Integrative Brain Imaging Center, National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry, Kodaira, Japan

3. Tokyo Metropolitan Rehabilitation Hospital, Tokyo, Japan

4. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Hikarigaoka Hospital, Takaoka, Japan

5. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Setagaya Memorial Hospital, Tokyo, Japan

6. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan

7. Department of Physical Rehabilitation, National Center Hospital, National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry Hospital, Kodaira, Japan

Abstract

Background Motor recovery varies across post-stroke individuals, some of whom require a better rehabilitation strategy. We hypothesized that macrostructural neuroplasticity of the motor control network including the cerebellum might underlie individual differences in motor recovery. Objectives. To gain insight into the macrostructural neuroplasticity after stroke, we examined 52 post-stroke individuals using both the Fugl-Meyer assessment and structural magnetic resonance imaging. Methods We performed voxel-based lesion symptom mapping and cross-sectional voxel-based morphometry to correlate the motor scores with the lesion location and the gray matter volume (GMV), respectively. Longitudinal data were available at ~8 and/or 15 weeks after admission from 43 individuals with supratentorial lesions. We performed a longitudinal VBM analysis followed by a multiple regression analysis to correlate between the changes of the motor assessment scores and those of GMV overtime. Results We found a cross-sectional correlation of residual motor functioning with GMV in the ipsilesional cerebellum and contralesional parietal cortex. Longitudinally, we found increases in GMV in the ipsilesional supplementary motor area, and the ipsilesional superior and inferior cerebellar zones, along with a GMV decrease in the ipsilesional thalamus. The motor recovery was correlated with the GMV changes in the superior and inferior cerebellar zones. The regaining of upper-limb motor functioning was correlated with the GMV changes of both superior and inferior cerebellum while that of lower-limb motor functioning with the GMV increase of the inferior cerebellum only. Conclusions The present findings support the hypothesis that macrostructural cerebellar neuroplasticity is correlated with individual differences in motor recovery after stroke.

Funder

Japan Science and Technology Agency

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science London

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

KAKENHI

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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