Cognitive Neuroimaging Group, MRC Cyclotron Unit, Hammersmith Hospital, London W120NN, UK.
Brain. 2009 Dec;132(Pt 12):3428-42. doi: 10.1093/brain/awp270.
Focal brain lesions are assumed to produce language deficits by two basic mechanisms: local cortical dysfunction at the lesion site, and remote cortical dysfunction due to disruption of the transfer and integration of information between connected brain regions. However, functional imaging studies investigating language outcome after aphasic stroke have tended to focus only on the role of local cortical function. In this positron emission tomography functional imaging study, we explored relationships between language comprehension performance after aphasic stroke and the functional connectivity of a key speech-processing region in left anterolateral superior temporal cortex. We compared the organization of left anterolateral superior temporal cortex functional connections during narrative speech comprehension in normal subjects with left anterolateral superior temporal cortex connectivity in a group of chronic aphasic stroke patients. We then evaluated the language deficits associated with altered left anterolateral superior temporal cortex connectivity in aphasic stroke. During normal narrative speech comprehension, left anterolateral superior temporal cortex displayed positive functional connections with left anterior basal temporal cortex, left inferior frontal gyrus and homotopic cortex in right anterolateral superior temporal cortex. As a group, aphasic patients demonstrated a selective disruption of the normal functional connection between left and right anterolateral superior temporal cortices. We observed that deficits in auditory single word and sentence comprehension correlated both with the degree of disruption of left-right anterolateral superior temporal cortical connectivity and with local activation in the anterolateral superior temporal cortex. Subgroup analysis revealed that aphasic patients with preserved positive intertemporal connectivity displayed better receptive language function; these patients also showed greater than normal left inferior frontal gyrus activity, suggesting a possible 'top-down' compensatory mechanism. These results demonstrate that functional connectivity between anterolateral superior temporal cortex and right anterior superior temporal cortex is a marker of receptive language outcome after aphasic stroke, and illustrate that language system organization after focal brain lesions may be marked by complex signatures of altered local and pathway-level function.
病灶部位局部皮质功能障碍,以及由于连接脑区之间的信息传递和整合中断导致的远隔皮质功能障碍。然而,研究失语性卒中后语言预后的功能影像学研究往往只关注局部皮质功能的作用。在这项正电子发射断层扫描功能影像学研究中,我们探讨了失语性卒中后语言理解能力与左侧前外侧颞上皮质关键言语处理区域的功能连接之间的关系。我们将正常受试者在叙述性言语理解过程中左侧前外侧颞上皮质功能连接的组织与一组慢性失语性卒中患者的左侧前外侧颞上皮质连接进行了比较。然后,我们评估了失语性卒中患者左侧前外侧颞上皮质连接改变与语言障碍的相关性。在正常的叙述性言语理解过程中,左侧前外侧颞上皮质与左侧前基底颞叶皮质、左侧额下回和右侧前外侧颞上皮质的同型皮质之间显示出正功能连接。作为一个整体,失语性卒中患者表现出左侧和右侧前外侧颞上皮质之间正常功能连接的选择性破坏。我们发现,听觉单词和句子理解的缺陷与左右前外侧颞上皮质连接中断的程度以及前外侧颞上皮质的局部激活都有关。亚组分析显示,具有保留的正时间连接的失语性卒中患者表现出更好的接受性语言功能;这些患者的左侧额下回活动也大于正常,提示可能存在“自上而下”的代偿机制。这些结果表明,前外侧颞上皮质与右侧前上颞叶皮质之间的功能连接是失语性卒中后接受性语言预后的标志物,并表明局灶性脑损伤后的语言系统组织可能以改变的局部和通路水平功能的复杂特征为标志。