Human Sensorimotor Control Laboratory, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Mn 55455, USA.
Stroke. 2010 Oct;41(10):2191-200. doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.110.583641. Epub 2010 Sep 2.
Loss of movement coordination is the main postacute symptom after cerebellar infarction. Although the course of motor recovery has been described previously, detailed kinematic descriptions of acute stage ataxia are rare and no attempt has been made to link improvements in motor function to measures of neural recovery and lesion location. This study provides a comprehensive assessment of how lesion site and arm dysfunction are associated in the acute stage and outlines the course of upper limb motor recovery for the first 4 months after the infarction.
Sixteen adult patients with cerebellar stroke and 11 age-matched healthy controls participated. Kinematics of goal-directed and unconstrained finger-pointing movements were measured at the acute stage and in 2-week and 3-month follow-ups. MRI data were obtained for the acute and 3-month follow-up sessions. A voxel-based lesion map subtraction analysis was performed to examine the effect of ischemic lesion sites on kinematic performance.
In the acute stage, nearly 70% of patients exhibited motor slowing with hand velocity and acceleration maxima below the range of the control group. MRI analysis revealed that in patients with impaired motor performance, lesions were more common in paravermal lobules IV/V and affected the deep cerebellar nuclei. Stroke affecting the superior cerebellar artery led to lower motor performance than infractions of the posterior cerebellar artery. By the 2-week-follow-up, hand kinematics had improved dramatically (gains in acceleration up to 86%). Improvements between the 2-week and the 3-month-follow-ups were less pronounced.
In the acute stage, arm movements were mainly characterized by abnormal slowness (bradykinesia) and not dyscoordination (ataxia). The motor signs were associated with lesions in paravermal regions of lobules IV/V and the deep cerebellar nuclei. Motor recovery was fast, with the majority of gains in upper limb function occurring in the first 2 weeks after the acute phase.
运动协调丧失是小脑梗死后主要的急性期后症状。虽然运动恢复过程已被描述过,但对急性期共济失调的详细运动学描述很少,也没有尝试将运动功能的改善与神经恢复和病变部位的测量联系起来。本研究全面评估了病变部位和手臂功能障碍在急性期的相关性,并概述了上肢运动在梗死后前 4 个月的恢复过程。
本研究纳入了 16 名成年小脑卒中患者和 11 名年龄匹配的健康对照者。在急性期以及 2 周和 3 个月的随访中,对目标导向和非约束性的手指指向运动的运动学进行了测量。在急性期和 3 个月的随访中获得了 MRI 数据。采用基于体素的病变映射减法分析来研究缺血性病变部位对运动表现的影响。
在急性期,近 70%的患者表现出运动迟缓,手部速度和加速度最大值均低于对照组。MRI 分析显示,运动功能受损的患者病变更常见于旁正中叶 IV/V 区,并影响了深部小脑核。影响上小脑动脉的卒中比影响后小脑动脉的梗死导致更低的运动性能。在 2 周随访时,手部运动学有了显著改善(加速度提高了高达 86%)。在 2 周和 3 个月随访之间的改善不明显。
在急性期,手臂运动主要表现为异常缓慢(运动迟缓),而不是不协调(共济失调)。运动迹象与旁正中叶 IV/V 区和深部小脑核的病变有关。运动恢复迅速,上肢功能的大部分改善发生在急性期后的前 2 周。