Newton J, Sunderland A, Butterworth S E, Peters A M, Peck K K, Gowland P A
Division of Stroke Medicine, University of Nottingham, Notttingham, United Kingdom.
Stroke. 2002 Dec;33(12):2881-7. doi: 10.1161/01.str.0000042660.38883.56.
Previous functional imaging studies of motor recovery after stroke have investigated cerebral activation during periods of repetitive, often complex, movement. This article reports the use of an event-related approach to study activation associated with isolated simple movements (wrist extension). This allows investigation of the pattern of the motor response and corresponding brain activation on a trial-by-trial basis. Patients with partial recovery can be assessed, and allowance can be made for abnormalities in the shape of hemodynamic responses.
Functional MRI at 3 T was performed during a series of isolated, near-isometric wrist extension movements. A visual tracking procedure was used to elicit forces of 10% and 20% of maximum voluntary contraction. Force output from both wrists was monitored continuously. A voxel-wise procedure was used to fit the optimum hemodynamic response functions in each case.
Three chronic stage patients with partial recovery were successfully scanned and compared with 8 healthy controls. The patients showed well-lateralized motor responses but inaccurate control of force. During movement of the paretic wrist, we observed excessive activation of the ipsilateral primary motor cortex and increased relative activation of the supplementary motor area compared with movement of the nonparetic side. In the primary motor area, hemodynamic responses peaked more quickly on the ipsilateral side in 2 patients for movements of the paretic hand, whereas controls showed the opposite trend.
An event-related approach can be used to study the relationship between motor responses and cerebral activation in patients with partial recovery. These preliminary findings suggest that excessive activation in ipsilateral motor cortex and secondary motor areas remains evident under these tightly controlled conditions and cannot be ascribed to mirror movements or abnormalities in the timing of the blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) response. However, close monitoring of motor responses also makes evident continuing impairment in motor skill, which makes comparison with activation in normal controls difficult.
以往关于中风后运动恢复的功能成像研究,调查了重复性、通常较为复杂的运动期间的大脑激活情况。本文报告了使用事件相关方法来研究与孤立简单运动(腕部伸展)相关的激活。这使得能够在逐个试验的基础上研究运动反应模式及相应的大脑激活情况。可以对部分恢复的患者进行评估,并考虑到血液动力学反应形状的异常情况。
在一系列孤立的、接近等长的腕部伸展运动期间,采用3T功能磁共振成像。使用视觉跟踪程序来引发最大自主收缩力10%和20%的力量。持续监测双腕的力量输出。在每种情况下,采用体素方法来拟合最佳血液动力学反应函数。
成功扫描了3例处于慢性期且有部分恢复的患者,并与8名健康对照者进行比较。患者表现出明显的运动反应侧化,但力量控制不准确。与非患侧运动相比,在患侧腕部运动期间,我们观察到同侧初级运动皮层过度激活,辅助运动区相对激活增加。在初级运动区,2例患者患侧手部运动时,同侧血液动力学反应峰值更快出现,而对照者呈现相反趋势。
事件相关方法可用于研究部分恢复患者的运动反应与大脑激活之间的关系。这些初步发现表明,在这些严格控制的条件下,同侧运动皮层和二级运动区的过度激活仍然明显,不能归因于镜像运动或血氧水平依赖(BOLD)反应时间的异常。然而,对运动反应的密切监测也显示出运动技能持续受损,这使得与正常对照者的激活情况比较变得困难。