Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 7 de 7
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Neurology ; 102(10): e209387, 2024 May 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38701386

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Motor outcomes after stroke relate to corticospinal tract (CST) damage. The brain leverages surviving neural pathways to compensate for CST damage and mediate motor recovery. Thus, concurrent age-related damage from white matter hyperintensities (WMHs) might affect neurologic capacity for recovery after CST injury. The role of WMHs in post-stroke motor outcomes is unclear. In this study, we evaluated whether WMHs modulate the relationship between CST damage and post-stroke motor outcomes. METHODS: We used data from the multisite ENIGMA Stroke Recovery Working Group with T1 and T2/fluid-attenuated inversion recovery imaging. CST damage was indexed with weighted CST lesion load (CST-LL). WMH volumes were extracted with Freesurfer's SAMSEG. Mixed-effects beta-regression models were fit to test the impact of CST-LL, WMH volume, and their interaction on motor impairment, controlling for age, days after stroke, and stroke volume. RESULTS: A total of 223 individuals were included. WMH volume related to motor impairment above and beyond CST-LL (ß = 0.178, 95% CI 0.025-0.331, p = 0.022). Relationships varied by WMH severity (mild vs moderate-severe). In individuals with mild WMHs, motor impairment related to CST-LL (ß = 0.888, 95% CI 0.604-1.172, p < 0.001) with a CST-LL × WMH interaction (ß = -0.211, 95% CI -0.340 to -0.026, p = 0.026). In individuals with moderate-severe WMHs, motor impairment related to WMH volume (ß = 0.299, 95% CI 0.008-0.590, p = 0.044), but did not significantly relate to CST-LL or a CST-LL × WMH interaction. DISCUSSION: WMHs relate to motor outcomes after stroke and modify relationships between motor impairment and CST damage. WMH-related damage may be under-recognized in stroke research as a factor contributing to variability in motor outcomes. Our findings emphasize the importance of brain structural reserve in motor outcomes after brain injury.


Subject(s)
Pyramidal Tracts , Stroke , White Matter , Humans , Pyramidal Tracts/diagnostic imaging , Pyramidal Tracts/pathology , Male , Female , Aged , White Matter/diagnostic imaging , White Matter/pathology , Stroke/diagnostic imaging , Stroke/pathology , Stroke/complications , Stroke/physiopathology , Middle Aged , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Recovery of Function/physiology , Aged, 80 and over
2.
medRxiv ; 2023 Oct 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37961329

ABSTRACT

Motor outcomes after stroke relate to corticospinal tract (CST) damage. Concurrent damage from white matter hyperintensities (WMHs) might impact neurological capacity for recovery after CST injury. Here, we evaluated if WMHs modulate the relationship between CST damage and post-stroke motor impairment outcome. We included 223 individuals from the ENIGMA Stroke Recovery Working Group. CST damage was indexed with weighted CST lesion load (CST-LL). Mixed effects beta-regression models were fit to test the impact of CST-LL, WMH volume, and their interaction on motor impairment. WMH volume related to motor impairment above and beyond CST-LL (ß = 0.178, p = 0.022). We tested if relationships varied by WMH severity (mild vs. moderate-severe). In individuals with mild WMHs, motor impairment related to CST-LL (ß = 0.888, p < 0.001) with a CST-LL x WMH interaction (ß = -0.211, 0.026). In individuals with moderate-severe WMHs, motor impairment related to WMH volume (ß = 0.299, p = 0.044), but did not significantly relate to CST-LL or a CST-LL x WMH interaction. WMH-related damage may be under-recognised in stroke research as a factor contributing to variability in motor outcomes. Our findings emphasize the importance of brain structural reserve in motor outcomes after brain injury.

3.
Front Neuroimaging ; 2: 1099301, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37554631

ABSTRACT

White matter hyperintensities (WMHs) are a risk factor for stroke. Consequently, many individuals who suffer a stroke have comorbid WMHs. The impact of WMHs on stroke recovery is an active area of research. Automated WMH segmentation methods are often employed as they require minimal user input and reduce risk of rater bias; however, these automated methods have not been specifically validated for use in individuals with stroke. Here, we present methodological validation of automated WMH segmentation methods in individuals with stroke. We first optimized parameters for FSL's publicly available WMH segmentation software BIANCA in two independent (multi-site) datasets. Our optimized BIANCA protocol achieved good performance within each independent dataset, when the BIANCA model was trained and tested in the same dataset or trained on mixed-sample data. BIANCA segmentation failed when generalizing a trained model to a new testing dataset. We therefore contrasted BIANCA's performance with SAMSEG, an unsupervised WMH segmentation tool available through FreeSurfer. SAMSEG does not require prior WMH masks for model training and was more robust to handling multi-site data. However, SAMSEG performance was slightly lower than BIANCA when data from a single site were tested. This manuscript will serve as a guide for the development and utilization of WMH analysis pipelines for individuals with stroke.

4.
Stroke ; 54(9): 2438-2441, 2023 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37465999

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Integrity of the corticospinal tract (CST) is an important biomarker for upper limb motor function following stroke. However, when structurally compromised, other tracts may become relevant for compensation or recovery of function. METHODS: We used the ENIGMA Stroke Recovery data set, a multicenter, retrospective, and cross-sectional collection of patients with upper limb impairment during the chronic phase of stroke to test the relevance of tracts in individuals with less and more severe (laterality index of CST fractional anisotropy ≥0.25) CST damage in an observational study design. White matter integrity was quantified using fractional anisotropy for the CST, the superior longitudinal fascicle, and the callosal fibers interconnecting the primary motor cortices between hemispheres. Optic radiations served as a control tract as they have no a priori relevance for the motor system. Pearson correlation was used for testing correlation with upper limb motor function (Fugl-Meyer upper extremity). RESULTS: From 1235 available data sets, 166 were selected (by imaging, Fugl-Meyer upper extremity, covariates, stroke location, and stage) for analyses. Only individuals with severe CST damage showed a positive association of fractional anisotropy in both callosal fibers interconnecting the primary motor cortices (r[21]=0.49; P=0.025) and superior longitudinal fascicle (r[21]=0.51; P=0.018) with Fugl-Meyer upper extremity. CONCLUSIONS: Our data support the notion that individuals with more severe damage of the CST depend on residual pathways for achieving better upper limb outcome than those with less affected CST.


Subject(s)
Stroke , White Matter , Humans , Cross-Sectional Studies , Retrospective Studies , White Matter/diagnostic imaging , Upper Extremity , Pyramidal Tracts/diagnostic imaging , Recovery of Function
5.
Neurology ; 100(20): e2103-e2113, 2023 05 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37015818

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Functional outcomes after stroke are strongly related to focal injury measures. However, the role of global brain health is less clear. In this study, we examined the impact of brain age, a measure of neurobiological aging derived from whole-brain structural neuroimaging, on poststroke outcomes, with a focus on sensorimotor performance. We hypothesized that more lesion damage would result in older brain age, which would in turn be associated with poorer outcomes. Related, we expected that brain age would mediate the relationship between lesion damage and outcomes. Finally, we hypothesized that structural brain resilience, which we define in the context of stroke as younger brain age given matched lesion damage, would differentiate people with good vs poor outcomes. METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional observational study using a multisite dataset of 3-dimensional brain structural MRIs and clinical measures from the ENIGMA Stroke Recovery. Brain age was calculated from 77 neuroanatomical features using a ridge regression model trained and validated on 4,314 healthy controls. We performed a 3-step mediation analysis with robust mixed-effects linear regression models to examine relationships between brain age, lesion damage, and stroke outcomes. We used propensity score matching and logistic regression to examine whether brain resilience predicts good vs poor outcomes in patients with matched lesion damage. RESULTS: We examined 963 patients across 38 cohorts. Greater lesion damage was associated with older brain age (ß = 0.21; 95% CI 0.04-0.38, p = 0.015), which in turn was associated with poorer outcomes, both in the sensorimotor domain (ß = -0.28; 95% CI -0.41 to -0.15, p < 0.001) and across multiple domains of function (ß = -0.14; 95% CI -0.22 to -0.06, p < 0.001). Brain age mediated 15% of the impact of lesion damage on sensorimotor performance (95% CI 3%-58%, p = 0.01). Greater brain resilience explained why people have better outcomes, given matched lesion damage (odds ratio 1.04, 95% CI 1.01-1.08, p = 0.004). DISCUSSION: We provide evidence that younger brain age is associated with superior poststroke outcomes and modifies the impact of focal damage. The inclusion of imaging-based assessments of brain age and brain resilience may improve the prediction of poststroke outcomes compared with focal injury measures alone, opening new possibilities for potential therapeutic targets.


Subject(s)
Stroke , Humans , Aged , Cross-Sectional Studies , Stroke/complications , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Neuroimaging
6.
Sci Data ; 9(1): 320, 2022 06 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35710678

ABSTRACT

Accurate lesion segmentation is critical in stroke rehabilitation research for the quantification of lesion burden and accurate image processing. Current automated lesion segmentation methods for T1-weighted (T1w) MRIs, commonly used in stroke research, lack accuracy and reliability. Manual segmentation remains the gold standard, but it is time-consuming, subjective, and requires neuroanatomical expertise. We previously released an open-source dataset of stroke T1w MRIs and manually-segmented lesion masks (ATLAS v1.2, N = 304) to encourage the development of better algorithms. However, many methods developed with ATLAS v1.2 report low accuracy, are not publicly accessible or are improperly validated, limiting their utility to the field. Here we present ATLAS v2.0 (N = 1271), a larger dataset of T1w MRIs and manually segmented lesion masks that includes training (n = 655), test (hidden masks, n = 300), and generalizability (hidden MRIs and masks, n = 316) datasets. Algorithm development using this larger sample should lead to more robust solutions; the hidden datasets allow for unbiased performance evaluation via segmentation challenges. We anticipate that ATLAS v2.0 will lead to improved algorithms, facilitating large-scale stroke research.


Subject(s)
Brain , Stroke , Algorithms , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Brain/pathology , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Neuroimaging , Stroke/diagnostic imaging , Stroke/pathology
7.
Front Neuroimaging ; 1: 1098604, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37555152

ABSTRACT

Although automated methods for stroke lesion segmentation exist, many researchers still rely on manual segmentation as the gold standard. Our detailed, standardized protocol for stroke lesion tracing on high-resolution 3D T1-weighted (T1w) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has been used to trace over 1,300 stroke MRI. In the current study, we describe the protocol, including a step-by-step method utilized for training multiple individuals to trace lesions ("tracers") in a consistent manner and suggestions for distinguishing between lesioned and non-lesioned areas in stroke brains. Inter-rater and intra-rater reliability were calculated across six tracers trained using our protocol, resulting in an average intraclass correlation of 0.98 and 0.99, respectively, as well as a Dice similarity coefficient of 0.727 and 0.839, respectively. This protocol provides a standardized guideline for researchers performing manual lesion segmentation in stroke T1-weighted MRI, with detailed methods to promote reproducibility in stroke research.

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...