Relationship Between Cortical Excitability Changes and Cortical Thickness in Subcortical Chronic Stroke

  • José A Graterol Pérez (Geteilte/r Erstautor/in)
  • Stephanie Guder (Geteilte/r Erstautor/in)
  • Chi-Un Choe
  • Christian Gerloff
  • Robert Schulz

Beteiligte Einrichtungen

Abstract

Ischemic stroke leads to excitability changes of the motor network as probed by means of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). There is still limited data that shows to what extent structural alterations of the motor network might be linked to excitability changes. Previous results argue that the microstructural state of specific corticofugal motor tracts such as the corticospinal tract associate with cortical excitability in chronic stroke patients. The relationship between changes of cortical anatomy after stroke, as operationalized by means of decreases or increases in local cortical thickness (CT), has scarcely been addressed. In the present study, we re-analyzed TMS data and recruitment curve properties of motor evoked potentials and CT data in a group of 14 well-recovered chronic stroke patients with isolated supratentorial subcortical lesions. CT data of the stroke patients were compared to CT data of 17 healthy controls. Whole-brain and region-of-interest based analyses were conducted to relate CT data to measures of motor cortical excitability and clinical data. We found that stroke patients exhibited significantly reduced CT not only in the ipsilesional primary motor cortex but also in numerous secondary motor and non-motor brain regions, particularly in the ipsilesional hemisphere including areas along the central sulcus, the inferior frontal sulcus, the intraparietal sulcus, and cingulate cortices. We could not detect any significant relationship between the extent of CT reduction and stroke-related excitability changes of the motor network or clinical scores.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummer802113
ISSN1664-2295
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 2022

Anmerkungen des Dekanats

Copyright © 2022 Graterol Pérez, Guder, Choe, Gerloff and Schulz.

PubMed 35345406