Cerebral perfusion in post-stroke aphasia and its relationship to residual language abilities

Maria V Ivanova, Ioannis Pappas, Ben Inglis, Alexis Pracar, Timothy J Herron, Juliana V Baldo, Andrew S Kayser, Mark D’Esposito, Nina F Dronkers
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Abstract

Abstract Stroke alters blood flow to the brain resulting in damaged tissue and cell death. Moreover, the disruption of cerebral blood flow (perfusion) can be observed in areas surrounding and distal to the lesion. These structurally preserved but sub-optimally perfused regions may also affect recovery. Thus, to better understand aphasia recovery the relationship between cerebral perfusion and language needs to be systematically examined. In the current study, we aimed to evaluate 1) how stroke affects perfusion outside of lesioned areas in chronic aphasia, and 2) how perfusion in specific cortical areas and perilesional tissue relates to language outcomes in aphasia. We analyzed perfusion data from a large sample of participants with chronic aphasia due to left hemisphere stroke (n = 43) and age-matched healthy controls (n = 25). We used anatomically-defined regions of interest that covered the frontal, parietal, and temporal areas of the perisylvian cortex in both hemispheres, areas typically known to support language, along with several control regions not implicated in language processing. For the aphasia group we also looked at three regions of interest in the perilesional tissue. We compared perfusion levels between the two groups and investigated the relationship between perfusion levels and language subtest scores while controlling for demographic and lesion variables. First, we observed that perfusion levels outside the lesioned areas were significantly reduced in frontal and parietal regions in the left hemisphere in people with aphasia compared to the control group, while no differences were observed for the right hemisphere regions. Second, we found that perfusion in the left temporal lobe (and most strongly in the posterior part of both superior and middle temporal gyri) and inferior parietal areas (supramarginal gyrus) was significantly related to residual expressive and receptive language abilities. In contrast, perfusion in the frontal regions did not show such a relationship; no relationship with language was also observed for perfusion levels in control areas and all right hemisphere regions. Third, perilesional perfusion was only marginally related to language production abilities. Cumulatively, the current findings demonstrate that blood flow is reduced beyond the lesion site in chronic aphasia and that hypoperfused neural tissue in critical temporoparietal language areas has a negative impact on behavioral outcomes. These results, using perfusion imaging, underscore the critical and general role that left hemisphere posterior temporal regions play in various expressive and receptive language abilities. Overall, the study highlights the importance of exploring perfusion measures in stroke.
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脑灌注治疗脑卒中后失语症及其与残语能力的关系
中风会改变流向大脑的血液,导致组织受损和细胞死亡。此外,在病变周围和远端可以观察到脑血流(灌注)的中断。这些结构上保存完好但未达到最佳灌注状态的区域也可能影响恢复。因此,为了更好地了解失语恢复,需要系统地研究脑灌注与语言之间的关系。在本研究中,我们旨在评估1)中风如何影响慢性失语症损伤区域外的灌注,以及2)特定皮质区域和病灶周围组织的灌注如何与失语症的语言结局相关。我们分析了大量左半球中风引起的慢性失语症患者(n = 43)和年龄匹配的健康对照(n = 25)的灌注数据。我们使用了解剖学定义的兴趣区域,覆盖了两个半球的外围皮层的额叶、顶叶和颞叶区域,这些区域通常被认为是支持语言的区域,以及几个与语言处理无关的控制区域。对于失语症组我们也观察了病灶周围组织的三个区域。我们比较了两组之间的灌注水平,并在控制人口统计学和病变变量的情况下,研究了灌注水平与语言亚测试分数之间的关系。首先,我们观察到,与对照组相比,失语症患者左半球额叶和顶叶受损区域外的灌注水平显著降低,而右半球区域没有观察到差异。其次,我们发现左颞叶(上颞回和中颞回后部最强烈)和下顶叶(边缘上回)的灌注与剩余的表达和接受语言能力显著相关。相比之下,额叶区的灌注没有表现出这种关系;对照区和所有右半球区域的灌注水平也与语言没有关系。第三,病灶周围灌注与语言产生能力只有微弱的相关性。总的来说,目前的研究结果表明,慢性失语症的血流量在病变部位以外减少,关键颞顶叶语言区神经组织灌注不足对行为结果有负面影响。这些结果,通过灌注成像,强调了左半球后颞区在各种表达和接受语言能力中发挥的关键和普遍作用。总之,该研究强调了探索脑卒中灌注措施的重要性。
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