36 results on '"Bonkhoff, Anna K."'
Search Results
2. Cognitive Demands Influence Upper Extremity Motor Performance During Recovery From Acute Stroke.
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Lin, David J, Erler, Kimberly S, Snider, Samuel B, Bonkhoff, Anna K, DiCarlo, Julie A, Lam, Nicole, Ranford, Jessica, Parlman, Kristin, Cohen, Audrey, Freeburn, Jennifer, Finklestein, Seth P, Schwamm, Lee H, Hochberg, Leigh R, and Cramer, Steven C
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Stroke ,Rehabilitation ,Aged ,Cognition ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Psychomotor Performance ,Recovery of Function ,Upper Extremity ,Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveTo test the hypothesis that cognitive demands influence motor performance during recovery from acute stroke, we tested patients with acute stroke on 2 motor tasks with different cognitive demands and related task performance to cognitive impairment and neuroanatomic injury.MethodsWe assessed the contralesional and ipsilesional upper extremities of a cohort of 50 patients with weakness after unilateral acute ischemic stroke at 3 time points with 2 tasks: the Box & Blocks Test, a task with greater cognitive demand, and Grip Strength, a simple and ballistic motor task. We compared performance on the 2 tasks, related motor performance to cognitive dysfunction, and used voxel-based lesion symptom mapping to determine neuroanatomic sites associated with motor performance.ResultsConsistent across contralesional and ipsilesional upper extremities and most pronounced immediately after stroke, Box & Blocks scores were significantly more impaired than Grip Strength scores. The presence of cognitive dysfunction significantly explained up to 33% of variance in Box & Blocks performance but was not associated with Grip Strength performance. While Grip Strength performance was associated with injury largely restricted to sensorimotor regions, Box & Blocks performance was associated with broad injury outside sensorimotor structures, particularly the dorsal anterior insula, a region known to be important for complex cognitive function.ConclusionsTogether, these results suggest that cognitive demands influence upper extremity motor performance during recovery from acute stroke. Our findings emphasize the integrated nature of motor and cognitive systems and suggest that it is critical to consider cognitive demands during motor testing and neurorehabilitation after stroke.
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- 2021
3. Fronto-striatal dynamic connectivity is linked to dopaminergic motor response in Parkinson's disease
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Hensel, Lukas, Seger, Aline, Farrher, Ezequiel, Bonkhoff, Anna K., Shah, N. Jon, Fink, Gereon R., Grefkes, Christian, Sommerauer, Michael, and Doppler, Christopher E.J.
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- 2023
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4. Understanding Delays in MRI-based Selection of Large Vessel Occlusion Stroke Patients for Endovascular Thrombectomy
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Regenhardt, Robert W., Nolan, Neal M., Rosenthal, Joseph A., McIntyre, Joyce A., Bretzner, Martin, Bonkhoff, Anna K., Snider, Samuel B., Das, Alvin S., Alotaibi, Naif M., Vranic, Justin E., Dmytriw, Adam A., Stapleton, Christopher J., Patel, Aman B., Rost, Natalia S., and Leslie-Mazwi, Thabele M.
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- 2022
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5. Prediction of stroke severity: systematic evaluation of lesion representations.
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Bonkhoff, Anna K., Cohen, Alexander L., Drew, William, Ferguson, Michael A., Hussain, Aaliya, Lin, Christopher, Schaper, Frederic L. W. V. J., Bourached, Anthony, Giese, Anne‐Katrin, Oliveira, Lara C., Regenhardt, Robert W., Schirmer, Markus D., Jern, Christina, Lindgren, Arne G., Maguire, Jane, Wu, Ona, Zafar, Sahar, Rhee, John Y., Kimchi, Eyal Y., and Corbetta, Maurizio
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STROKE , *PREDICTION models , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *STROKE patients , *DIAGNOSTIC imaging - Abstract
Objective: To systematically evaluate which lesion‐based imaging features and methods allow for the best statistical prediction of poststroke deficits across independent datasets. Methods: We utilized imaging and clinical data from three independent datasets of patients experiencing acute stroke (N1 = 109, N2 = 638, N3 = 794) to statistically predict acute stroke severity (NIHSS) based on lesion volume, lesion location, and structural and functional disconnection with the lesion location using normative connectomes. Results: We found that prediction models trained on small single‐center datasets could perform well using within‐dataset cross‐validation, but results did not generalize to independent datasets (median R2N1 = 0.2%). Performance across independent datasets improved using large single‐center training data (R2N2 = 15.8%) and improved further using multicenter training data (R2N3 = 24.4%). These results were consistent across lesion attributes and prediction models. Including either structural or functional disconnection in the models outperformed prediction based on volume or location alone (P < 0.001, FDR‐corrected). Interpretation: We conclude that (1) prediction performance in independent datasets of patients with acute stroke cannot be inferred from cross‐validated results within a dataset, as performance results obtained via these two methods differed consistently, (2) prediction performance can be improved by training on large and, importantly, multicenter datasets, and (3) structural and functional disconnection allow for improved prediction of acute stroke severity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Radiomics-Derived Brain Age Predicts Functional Outcome After Acute Ischemic Stroke
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Bretzner, Martin, Bonkhoff, Anna K, Schirmer, Markus D., Hong, Sungmin, Dalca, Adrian, Donahue, Kathleen, Giese, Anne-Katrin, Etherton, Mark R, Rist, Pamela M, Nardin, Marco, Regenhardt, Robert W, Leclerc, Xavier, Lopes, Renaud, Gautherot, Morgan, Wang, Clinton, Benavente, Oscar R, Cole, John W., Donatti, Amanda, Griessenauer, Christoph, Heitsch, Laura, Holmegaard, Lukas, Jood, Katarina, Jimenez-Conde, Jordi, Kittner, Steven J, Lemmens, Robin, Levi, Christopher R, McArdle, Patrick F, McDonough, Caitrin W., Meschia, James F, Phuah, Chia-Ling, Rolfs, Arndt, Ropele, Stefan, Rosand, Jonathan, Roquer, Jaume, Rundek, Tatjana, Sacco, Ralph L., Schmidt, Reinhold, Sharma, Pankaj, Slowik, Agnieszka, Sousa, Alessandro, Stanne, Tara M, Strbian, Daniel, Tatlisumak, Turgut, Thijs, Vincent, Vagal, Achala, Wasselius, Johan, Woo, Daniel, Wu, Ona, Zand, Ramin, Worrall, Bradford B, Maguire, Jane, Lindgren, Arne G, Jern, Christina, Golland, Polina, Kuchcinski, Grégory, and Rost, Natalia S
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- 2022
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7. Reclassifying stroke lesion anatomy
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Bonkhoff, Anna K., Xu, Tianbo, Nelson, Amy, Gray, Robert, Jha, Ashwani, Cardoso, Jorge, Ourselin, Sebastien, Rees, Geraint, Jäger, Hans Rolf, and Nachev, Parashkev
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- 2021
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8. Association of Stroke Lesion Pattern and White Matter Hyperintensity Burden With Stroke Severity and Outcome
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Bonkhoff, Anna K, Hong, Sungmin, Bretzner, Martin, Schirmer, Markus D., Regenhardt, Robert W, Arsava, E. Murat, Donahue, Kathleen, Nardin, Marco, Dalca, Adrian, Giese, Anne-Katrin, Etherton, Mark R, Hancock, Brandon L., Mocking, Steven J.T., McIntosh, Elissa, Attia, John, Benavente, Oscar, Cole, John W., Donatti, Amanda, Griessenauer, Christoph, Heitsch, Laura, Holmegaard, Lukas, Jood, Katarina, Jimenez-Conde, Jordi, Kittner, Steven, Lemmens, Robin, Levi, Christopher, McDonough, Caitrin W., Meschia, James, Phuah, Chia-Ling, Rolfs, Arndt, Ropele, Stefan, Rosand, Jonathan, Roquer, Jaume, Rundek, Tatjana, Sacco, Ralph L., Schmidt, Reinhold, Sharma, Pankaj, Slowik, Agnieszka, Soederholm, Martin, Sousa, Alessandro, Stanne, Tara M, Strbian, Daniel, Tatlisumak, Turgut, Thijs, Vincent, Vagal, Achala, Wasselius, Johan, Woo, Daniel, Zand, Ramin, McArdle, Patrick, Worrall, Bradford B, Jern, Christina, Lindgren, Arne G, Maguire, Jane, Golland, Polina, Bzdok, Danilo, Wu, Ona, and Rost, Natalia S
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- 2022
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9. Association of Infarct Topography and Outcome After Endovascular Thrombectomy in Patients With Acute Ischemic Stroke
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Regenhardt, Robert William, Bonkhoff, Anna K, Bretzner, Martin, Etherton, Mark R, Das, Alvin S, Hong, Sungmin, Alotaibi, Naif M, Vranic, Justin E, Dmytriw, Adam A, Stapleton, Christopher J, Patel, Aman B, Leslie-Mazwi, Thabele M, and Rost, Natalia S
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- 2022
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10. Female Stroke: Sex Differences in Acute Treatment and Early Outcomes of Acute Ischemic Stroke
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Bonkhoff, Anna K., Karch, André, Weber, Ralph, Wellmann, Jürgen, and Berger, Klaus
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- 2021
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11. Veridical stimulus localization is linked to human area V5/MT+ activity
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Bonkhoff, Anna K., Zimmermann, Eckart, and Fink, Gereon R.
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- 2017
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12. Scaling behaviours of deep learning and linear algorithms for the prediction of stroke severity.
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Bourached, Anthony, Bonkhoff, Anna K, Schirmer, Markus D, Regenhardt, Robert W, Bretzner, Martin, Hong, Sungmin, Dalca, Adrian V, Giese, Anne-Katrin, Winzeck, Stefan, Jern, Christina, Lindgren, Arne G, Maguire, Jane, Wu, Ona, Rhee, John, Kimchi, Eyal Y, and Rost, Natalia S
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- 2024
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13. Altered Dynamic Resting State Functional Connectivity Associated With Somatosensory Impairments in the Upper Limb in the Early Sub-Acute Phase Post-Stroke.
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Bruyn, Nele De, Bonkhoff, Anna K., Saenen, Leen, Thijs, Liselot, Essers, Bea, Alaerts, Kaat, and Verheyden, Geert
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- 2023
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14. In a hub-and-spoke network, spoke-administered thrombolysis reduces mechanical thrombectomy procedure time and number of passes.
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Kraft, Andrew W, Awad, Amine, Rosenthal, Joseph A, Dmytriw, Adam A, Vranic, Justin E, Bonkhoff, Anna K, Bretzner, Martin, Hirsch, Joshua A, Rabinov, James D, Stapleton, Christopher J, Schwamm, Lee H, Rost, Natalia S, Leslie-Mazwi, Thabele M, Patel, Aman B, and Regenhardt, Robert W
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THROMBOLYTIC therapy ,THROMBECTOMY ,TISSUE plasminogen activator - Abstract
Background: The utility of intravenous thrombolysis (IVT) prior to mechanical thrombectomy (MT) in large vessel occlusion stroke (LVO) is controversial. Some data suggest IVT increases MT technical difficulty. Within our hub-and-spoke telestroke network, we examined how spoke-administered IVT affected hub MT procedure time and pass number. Methods: Patients presenting to 25 spoke hospitals who were transferred to the hub and underwent MT from 2018 to 2020 were identified from a prospectively maintained database. MT procedure time, fluoroscopy time, and pass number were obtained from operative reports. Results: Of 107 patients, 48 received IVT at spokes. Baseline characteristics and NIHSS were similar. The last known well (LKW)-to-puncture time was shorter among IVT patients (4.3 ± 1.9 h vs. 10.5 ± 6.5 h, p < 0.0001). In patients that received IVT, mean MT procedure time was decreased by 18.8 min (50.5 ± 29.4 vs. 69.3 ± 46.7 min, p = 0.02) and mean fluoroscopy time was decreased by 11.3 min (21.7 ± 15.8 vs. 33.0 ± 30.9 min, p = 0.03). Furthermore, IVT-treated patients required fewer MT passes (median 1 pass [IQR 1.0, 1.80] vs. 2 passes [1.0, 2.3], p = 0.0002) and were more likely to achieve reperfusion in ≤2 passes (81.3% vs. 59.3%, p = 0.01). An increased proportion of IVT-treated patients achieved TICI 2b-3 reperfusion after MT (93.9% vs. 83.8%, p = 0.045). There were no associations between MT procedural characteristics and LKW-to-puncture time. Conclusion: Within our network, hub MT following spoke-administered IVT was faster, required fewer passes, and achieved improved reperfusion. This suggests spoke-administered IVT does not impair MT, but instead may enhance it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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15. The relevance of rich club regions for functional outcome post‐stroke is enhanced in women.
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Bonkhoff, Anna K., Schirmer, Markus D., Bretzner, Martin, Hong, Sungmin, Regenhardt, Robert W., Donahue, Kathleen L., Nardin, Marco J., Dalca, Adrian V., Giese, Anne‐Katrin, Etherton, Mark R., Hancock, Brandon L., Mocking, Steven J. T., McIntosh, Elissa C., Attia, John, Cole, John W., Donatti, Amanda, Griessenauer, Christoph J., Heitsch, Laura, Holmegaard, Lukas, and Jood, Katarina
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STROKE patients , *SEX (Biology) - Abstract
This study aimed to investigate the influence of stroke lesions in predefined highly interconnected (rich‐club) brain regions on functional outcome post‐stroke, determine their spatial specificity and explore the effects of biological sex on their relevance. We analyzed MRI data recorded at index stroke and ~3‐months modified Rankin Scale (mRS) data from patients with acute ischemic stroke enrolled in the multisite MRI‐GENIE study. Spatially normalized structural stroke lesions were parcellated into 108 atlas‐defined bilateral (sub)cortical brain regions. Unfavorable outcome (mRS > 2) was modeled in a Bayesian logistic regression framework. Effects of individual brain regions were captured as two compound effects for (i) six bilateral rich club and (ii) all further non‐rich club regions. In spatial specificity analyses, we randomized the split into "rich club" and "non‐rich club" regions and compared the effect of the actual rich club regions to the distribution of effects from 1000 combinations of six random regions. In sex‐specific analyses, we introduced an additional hierarchical level in our model structure to compare male and female‐specific rich club effects. A total of 822 patients (age: 64.7[15.0], 39% women) were analyzed. Rich club regions had substantial relevance in explaining unfavorable functional outcome (mean of posterior distribution: 0.08, area under the curve: 0.8). In particular, the rich club‐combination had a higher relevance than 98.4% of random constellations. Rich club regions were substantially more important in explaining long‐term outcome in women than in men. All in all, lesions in rich club regions were associated with increased odds of unfavorable outcome. These effects were spatially specific and more pronounced in women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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16. Radiomics-Derived Brain Age Predicts Functional Outcome After Acute Ischemic Stroke.
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Bretzner, Martin, Bonkhoff, Anna K., Schirmer, Markus D., Hong, Sungmin, Dalca, Adrian, Donahue, Kathleen, Giese, Anne-Katrin, Etherton, Mark R., Rist, Pamela M., Nardin, Marco, Regenhardt, Robert W., Leclerc, Xavier, Lopes, Renaud, Gautherot, Morgan, Wang, Clinton, Benavente, Oscar R., Cole, John W., Donatti, Amanda, Griessenauer, Christoph, and Heitsch, Laura
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- 2023
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17. Deep profiling of multiple ischemic lesions in a large, multi-center cohort: Frequency, spatial distribution, and associations to clinical characteristics.
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Bonkhoff, Anna K., Ullberg, Teresa, Bretzner, Martin, Sungmin Hong, Schirmer, Markus D., Regenhardt, Robert W., Donahue, Kathleen L., Nardin, Marco J., Dalca, Adrian V., Giese, Anne-Katrin, Etherton, Mark R., Hancock, Brandon L., Mocking, Steven J. T., McIntosh, Elissa C., Attia, John, Cole, John W., Donatti, Amanda, Griessenauer, Christoph J., Heitsch, Laura, and Holmegaard, Lukas
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STROKE patients ,DIFFUSION magnetic resonance imaging - Abstract
Background purpose: A substantial number of patients with acute ischemic stroke (AIS) experience multiple acute lesions (MAL). We here aimed to scrutinize MAL in a large radiologically deep-phenotyped cohort. Materials and methods: Analyses relied upon imaging and clinical data from the international MRI-GENIE study. Imaging data comprised both Fluidattenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) for white matter hyperintensity (WMH) burden estimation and diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) sequences for the assessment of acute stroke lesions. The initial step featured the systematic evaluation of occurrences of MAL within one and several vascular supply territories. Associations between MAL and important imaging and clinical characteristics were subsequently determined. The interaction effect between single and multiple lesion status and lesion volume was estimated by means of Bayesian hierarchical regression modeling for both stroke severity and functional outcome. Results: We analyzed 2,466 patients (age = 63.4 14.8, 39% women), 49.7% of which presented with a single lesion. Another 37.4% experienced MAL in a single vascular territory, while 12.9% featured lesions in multiple vascular territories. Within most territories, MAL occurred as frequently as single lesions (ratio 1:1). Only the brainstem region comprised fewer patients with MAL (ratio 1:4). Patients with MAL presented with a significantly higher lesion volume and acute NIHSS (7.7 vs. 1.7 ml and 4 vs. 3, pFDR < 0.001). In contrast, patients with a single lesion were characterized by a significantly higher WMH burden (6.1 vs. 5.3 ml, pFDR = 0.048). Functional outcome did not differ significantly between patients with single versus multiple lesions. Bayesian analyses suggested that the association between lesion volume and stroke severity between single and multiple lesions was the same in case of anterior circulation stroke. In case of posterior circulation stroke, lesion volume was linked to a higher NIHSS only among those with MAL. Conclusion: Multiple lesions, especially those within one vascular territory, occurred more frequently than previously reported. Overall, multiple lesions were distinctly linked to a higher acute stroke severity, a higher total DWI lesion volume and a lower WMH lesion volume. In posterior circulation stroke, lesion volume was linked to a higher stroke severity in multiple lesions only. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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18. Sex-specific lesion pattern of functional outcomes after stroke.
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Bonkhoff, Anna K., Bretzner, Martin, Sungmin Hong, Schirmer, Markus D., Cohen, Alexander, Regenhardt, Robert W., Donahue, Kathleen L., Nardin, Marco J., Dalca, Adrian V., Giese, Anne-Katrin, Etherton, Mark R., Hancock, Brandon L., Mocking, Steven J. T., McIntosh, Elissa C., Attia, John, Benavente, Oscar R., Bevan, Stephen, Cole, John W., Donatti, Amanda, and Griessenauer, Christoph J.
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- 2022
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19. Recovery after stroke: the severely impaired are a distinct group.
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Bonkhoff, Anna K., Hope, Tom, Bzdok, Danilo, Guggisberg, Adrian G., Hawe, Rachel L., Dukelow, Sean P., Chollet, François, Lin, David J., Grefkes, Christian, and Bowman, Howard
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STROKE ,DIFFUSION tensor imaging ,TRANSCRANIAL magnetic stimulation ,RESEARCH ,CONVALESCENCE ,RESEARCH methodology ,EVALUATION research ,ARM ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH funding ,PROBABILITY theory - Abstract
Introduction: Stroke causes different levels of impairment and the degree of recovery varies greatly between patients. The majority of recovery studies are biased towards patients with mild-to-moderate impairments, challenging a unified recovery process framework. Our aim was to develop a statistical framework to analyse recovery patterns in patients with severe and non-severe initial impairment and concurrently investigate whether they recovered differently.Methods: We designed a Bayesian hierarchical model to estimate 3-6 months upper limb Fugl-Meyer (FM) scores after stroke. When focusing on the explanation of recovery patterns, we addressed confounds affecting previous recovery studies and considered patients with FM-initial scores <45 only. We systematically explored different FM-breakpoints between severe/non-severe patients (FM-initial=5-30). In model comparisons, we evaluated whether impairment-level-specific recovery patterns indeed existed. Finally, we estimated the out-of-sample prediction performance for patients across the entire initial impairment range.Results: Recovery data was assembled from eight patient cohorts (n=489). Data were best modelled by incorporating two subgroups (breakpoint: FM-initial=10). Both subgroups recovered a comparable constant amount, but with different proportional components: severely affected patients recovered more the smaller their impairment, while non-severely affected patients recovered more the larger their initial impairment. Prediction of 3-6 months outcomes could be done with an R2=63.5% (95% CI=51.4% to 75.5%).Conclusions: Our work highlights the benefit of simultaneously modelling recovery of severely-to-non-severely impaired patients and demonstrates both shared and distinct recovery patterns. Our findings provide evidence that the severe/non-severe subdivision in recovery modelling is not an artefact of previous confounds. The presented out-of-sample prediction performance may serve as benchmark to evaluate promising biomarkers of stroke recovery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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20. Development and Validation of Prediction Models for Severe Complications After Acute Ischemic Stroke: A Study Based on the Stroke Registry of Northwestern Germany.
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Bonkhoff, Anna K., Rübsamen, Nicole, Grefkes, Christian, Rost, Natalia S., Berger, Klaus, and Karch, André
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- 2022
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21. Precision medicine in stroke: towards personalized outcome predictions using artificial intelligence.
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Bonkhoff, Anna K and Grefkes, Christian
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ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *INDIVIDUALIZED medicine , *MACHINE learning , *BIG data , *MEDICAL care , *STROKE - Abstract
Stroke ranks among the leading causes for morbidity and mortality worldwide. New and continuously improving treatment options such as thrombolysis and thrombectomy have revolutionized acute stroke treatment in recent years. Following modern rhythms, the next revolution might well be the strategic use of the steadily increasing amounts of patient-related data for generating models enabling individualized outcome predictions. Milestones have already been achieved in several health care domains, as big data and artificial intelligence have entered everyday life. The aim of this review is to synoptically illustrate and discuss how artificial intelligence approaches may help to compute single-patient predictions in stroke outcome research in the acute, subacute and chronic stage. We will present approaches considering demographic, clinical and electrophysiological data, as well as data originating from various imaging modalities and combinations thereof. We will outline their advantages, disadvantages, their potential pitfalls and the promises they hold with a special focus on a clinical audience. Throughout the review we will highlight methodological aspects of novel machine-learning approaches as they are particularly crucial to realize precision medicine. We will finally provide an outlook on how artificial intelligence approaches might contribute to enhancing favourable outcomes after stroke. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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22. Radiomic signature of DWI‐FLAIR mismatch in large vessel occlusion stroke.
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Regenhardt, Robert W., Bretzner, Martin, Zanon Zotin, Maria Clara, Bonkhoff, Anna K., Etherton, Mark R., Hong, Sungmin, Das, Alvin S., Alotaibi, Naif M., Vranic, Justin E., Dmytriw, Adam A., Stapleton, Christopher J., Patel, Aman B., Kuchcinski, Gregory, Rost, Natalia S., and Leslie‐Mazwi, Thabele M.
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FEATURE extraction ,RADIOMICS ,ISCHEMIC stroke - Abstract
Background and Purpose: Ischemic diffusion‐weighted imaging‐fluid‐attenuated inversion recovery (DWI‐FLAIR) mismatch may be useful in guiding acute stroke treatment decisions given its relationship to onset time and parenchymal viability; however, it relies on subjective grading. Radiomics is an emerging image quantification methodology that may objectively represent continuous image characteristics. We propose a novel radiomics approach to characterize DWI‐FLAIR mismatch. Methods: Ischemic lesions were visually graded for FLAIR positivity (absent, subtle, obvious) among consecutive large vessel occlusion stroke patients who underwent hyperacute MRI. Radiomic features were extracted from within the lesions on DWI and FLAIR. The DWI‐FLAIR mismatch radiomics signature was built with features systematically selected by a cross‐validated ElasticNet linear regression model of mismatch. Results: We identified 103 patients with mean age 68 ± 16 years; 63% were female. FLAIR hyperintensity was absent in 25%, subtle in 55%, and obvious in 20%. Inter‐rater agreement for visual grading was moderate (Κ =.58). The radiomics signature of DWI‐FLAIR mismatch included native FLAIR histogram kurtosis and local binary pattern‐filtered FLAIR gray‐level cluster shade; both correlated with visual grading (ρ = –.42, p <.001 and ρ =.40, p <.001, respectively). Conclusions: Radiomics can describe DWI‐FLAIR mismatch and may provide objective, continuous biomarkers for infarct evolution using clinical‐grade images. These novel biomarkers may prove useful for treatment decisions and future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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23. Dynamic connectivity predicts acute motor impairment and recovery post-stroke.
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Bonkhoff, Anna K., Rehme, Anne K., Hense, Lukas, Tscherpe, Caroline, Volz, Lukas J., Espinoza, Flor A., Gazula, Harshvardhan, Vergara, Victor M., Fink, Gereon R., Calhoun, Vince D., Rost, Natalia S., and Grefkes, Christian
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- 2021
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24. Excessive White Matter Hyperintensity Increases Susceptibility to Poor Functional Outcomes After Acute Ischemic Stroke.
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Hong, Sungmin, Giese, Anne-Katrin, Schirmer, Markus D., Bonkhoff, Anna K., Bretzner, Martin, Rist, Pamela, Dalca, Adrian V., Regenhardt, Robert W., Etherton, Mark R., Donahue, Kathleen L., Nardin, Marco, Mocking, Steven J. T., McIntosh, Elissa C., Attia, John, Benavente, Oscar R., Cole, John W., Donatti, Amanda, Griessenauer, Christoph J., Heitsch, Laura, and Holmegaard, Lukas
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ISCHEMIC stroke ,FUNCTIONAL assessment ,WHITE matter (Nerve tissue) ,CORONARY artery disease ,ATRIAL fibrillation - Abstract
Objective: To personalize the prognostication of post-stroke outcome using MRI-detected cerebrovascular pathology, we sought to investigate the association between the excessive white matter hyperintensity (WMH) burden unaccounted for by the traditional stroke risk profile of individual patients and their long-term functional outcomes after a stroke. Methods: We included 890 patients who survived after an acute ischemic stroke from the MRI-Genetics Interface Exploration (MRI-GENIE) study, for whom data on vascular risk factors (VRFs), including age, sex, atrial fibrillation, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, coronary artery disease, smoking, prior stroke history, as well as acute stroke severity, 3- to−6-month modified Rankin Scale score (mRS), WMH, and brain volumes, were available. We defined the unaccounted WMH (uWMH) burden via modeling of expected WMH burden based on the VRF profile of each individual patient. The association of uWMH and mRS score was analyzed by linear regression analysis. The odds ratios of patients who achieved full functional independence (mRS < 2) in between trichotomized uWMH burden groups were calculated by pair-wise comparisons. Results: The expected WMH volume was estimated with respect to known VRFs. The uWMH burden was associated with a long-term functional outcome (β = 0.104, p < 0.01). Excessive uWMH burden significantly reduced the odds of achieving full functional independence after a stroke compared to the low and average uWMH burden [OR = 0.4, 95% CI: (0.25, 0.63), p < 0.01 and OR = 0.61, 95% CI: (0.42, 0.87), p < 0.01, respectively]. Conclusion: The excessive amount of uWMH burden unaccounted for by the traditional VRF profile was associated with worse post-stroke functional outcomes. Further studies are needed to evaluate a lifetime brain injury reflected in WMH unrelated to the VRF profile of a patient as an important factor for stroke recovery and a plausible indicator of brain health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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25. MRI Radiomic Signature of White Matter Hyperintensities Is Associated With Clinical Phenotypes.
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Bretzner, Martin, Bonkhoff, Anna K., Schirmer, Markus D., Hong, Sungmin, Dalca, Adrian V., Donahue, Kathleen L., Giese, Anne-Katrin, Etherton, Mark R., Rist, Pamela M., Nardin, Marco, Marinescu, Razvan, Wang, Clinton, Regenhardt, Robert W., Leclerc, Xavier, Lopes, Renaud, Benavente, Oscar R., Cole, John W., Donatti, Amanda, Griessenauer, Christoph J., and Heitsch, Laura
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WHITE matter (Nerve tissue) ,ISCHEMIC stroke ,CORONARY artery disease ,RADIOMICS ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging - Abstract
Objective: Neuroimaging measurements of brain structural integrity are thought to be surrogates for brain health, but precise assessments require dedicated advanced image acquisitions. By means of quantitatively describing conventional images, radiomic analyses hold potential for evaluating brain health. We sought to: (1) evaluate radiomics to assess brain structural integrity by predicting white matter hyperintensities burdens (WMH) and (2) uncover associations between predictive radiomic features and clinical phenotypes. Methods: We analyzed a multi-site cohort of 4,163 acute ischemic strokes (AIS) patients with T2-FLAIR MR images with total brain and WMH segmentations. Radiomic features were extracted from normal-appearing brain tissue (brain mask–WMH mask). Radiomics-based prediction of personalized WMH burden was done using ElasticNet linear regression. We built a radiomic signature of WMH with stable selected features predictive of WMH burden and then related this signature to clinical variables using canonical correlation analysis (CCA). Results: Radiomic features were predictive of WMH burden (R
2 = 0.855 ± 0.011). Seven pairs of canonical variates (CV) significantly correlated the radiomics signature of WMH and clinical traits with respective canonical correlations of 0.81, 0.65, 0.42, 0.24, 0.20, 0.15, and 0.15 (FDR-corrected p -valuesCV 1 – 6 < 0.001, p -valueCV 7 = 0.012). The clinical CV1 was mainly influenced by age, CV2 by sex, CV3 by history of smoking and diabetes, CV4 by hypertension, CV5 by atrial fibrillation (AF) and diabetes, CV6 by coronary artery disease (CAD), and CV7 by CAD and diabetes. Conclusion: Radiomics extracted from T2-FLAIR images of AIS patients capture microstructural damage of the cerebral parenchyma and correlate with clinical phenotypes, suggesting different radiographical textural abnormalities per cardiovascular risk profile. Further research could evaluate radiomics to predict the progression of WMH and for the follow-up of stroke patients' brain health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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26. Outcome after acute ischemic stroke is linked to sex-specific lesion patterns.
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Bonkhoff, Anna K., Schirmer, Markus D., Bretzner, Martin, Hong, Sungmin, Regenhardt, Robert W., Brudfors, Mikael, Donahue, Kathleen L., Nardin, Marco J., Dalca, Adrian V., Giese, Anne-Katrin, Etherton, Mark R., Hancock, Brandon L., Mocking, Steven J. T., McIntosh, Elissa C., Attia, John, Benavente, Oscar R., Bevan, Stephen, Cole, John W., Donatti, Amanda, and Griessenauer, Christoph J.
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ISCHEMIC stroke ,NEUROLINGUISTICS ,BRAIN damage - Abstract
Acute ischemic stroke affects men and women differently. In particular, women are often reported to experience higher acute stroke severity than men. We derived a low-dimensional representation of anatomical stroke lesions and designed a Bayesian hierarchical modeling framework tailored to estimate possible sex differences in lesion patterns linked to acute stroke severity (National Institute of Health Stroke Scale). This framework was developed in 555 patients (38% female). Findings were validated in an independent cohort (n = 503, 41% female). Here, we show brain lesions in regions subserving motor and language functions help explain stroke severity in both men and women, however more widespread lesion patterns are relevant in female patients. Higher stroke severity in women, but not men, is associated with left hemisphere lesions in the vicinity of the posterior circulation. Our results suggest there are sex-specific functional cerebral asymmetries that may be important for future investigations of sex-stratified approaches to management of acute ischemic stroke. Acute ischemic stroke impacts men and women differently. Here, the authors show how different lesion patterns in men and women are linked to the extent of stroke severity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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27. Abnormal dynamic functional connectivity is linked to recovery after acute ischemic stroke.
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Bonkhoff, Anna K., Schirmer, Markus D., Bretzner, Martin, Etherton, Mark, Donahue, Kathleen, Tuozzo, Carissa, Nardin, Marco, Giese, Anne‐Katrin, Wu, Ona, D. Calhoun, Vince, Grefkes, Christian, and Rost, Natalia S.
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ISCHEMIC stroke , *FUNCTIONAL connectivity , *ADOLESCENT idiopathic scoliosis , *K-means clustering , *WHITE matter (Nerve tissue) , *STATISTICAL correlation - Abstract
The aim of the current study was to explore the whole‐brain dynamic functional connectivity patterns in acute ischemic stroke (AIS) patients and their relation to short and long‐term stroke severity. We investigated resting‐state functional MRI‐based dynamic functional connectivity of 41 AIS patients two to five days after symptom onset. Re‐occurring dynamic connectivity configurations were obtained using a sliding window approach and k‐means clustering. We evaluated differences in dynamic patterns between three NIHSS‐stroke severity defined groups (mildly, moderately, and severely affected patients). Furthermore, we built Bayesian hierarchical models to evaluate the predictive capacity of dynamic connectivity and examine the interrelation with clinical measures, such as white matter hyperintensity lesions. Finally, we established correlation analyses between dynamic connectivity and AIS severity as well as 90‐day neurological recovery (ΔNIHSS). We identified three distinct dynamic connectivity configurations acutely post‐stroke. More severely affected patients spent significantly more time in a configuration that was characterized by particularly strong connectivity and isolated processing of functional brain domains (three‐level ANOVA: p <.05, post hoc t tests: p <.05, FDR‐corrected). Configuration‐specific time estimates possessed predictive capacity of stroke severity in addition to the one of clinical measures. Recovery, as indexed by the realized change of the NIHSS over time, was significantly linked to the dynamic connectivity between bilateral intraparietal lobule and left angular gyrus (Pearson's r = −.68, p =.003, FDR‐corrected). Our findings demonstrate transiently increased isolated information processing in multiple functional domains in case of severe AIS. Dynamic connectivity involving default mode network components significantly correlated with recovery in the first 3 months poststroke. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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28. Sex Differences in Acute Treatment and Early Outcomes of Acute Ischemic Stroke.
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Bonkhoff, Anna K., Karch, André, Weber, Ralph, Wellmann, Jürgen, and Berger, Klaus
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- 2021
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29. Bringing proportional recovery into proportion: Bayesian modelling of post-stroke motor impairment.
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Bonkhoff, Anna K, Hope, Thomas, Bzdok, Danilo, Guggisberg, Adrian G, Hawe, Rachel L, Dukelow, Sean P, Rehme, Anne K, Fink, Gereon R, Grefkes, Christian, and Bowman, Howard
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FORECASTING , *NEUROLOGY , *ARM , *DISABILITIES , *DATA recovery , *RESEARCH , *STROKE , *CONVALESCENCE , *RESEARCH methodology , *EVALUATION research , *MEDICAL cooperation , *COMPARATIVE studies , *PROBABILITY theory , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
Accurate predictions of motor impairment after stroke are of cardinal importance for the patient, clinician, and healthcare system. More than 10 years ago, the proportional recovery rule was introduced by promising that high-fidelity predictions of recovery following stroke were based only on the initially lost motor function, at least for a specific fraction of patients. However, emerging evidence suggests that this recovery rule is subject to various confounds and may apply less universally than previously assumed. Here, we systematically revisited stroke outcome predictions by applying strategies to avoid confounds and fitting hierarchical Bayesian models. We jointly analysed 385 post-stroke trajectories from six separate studies-one of the largest overall datasets of upper limb motor recovery. We addressed confounding ceiling effects by introducing a subset approach and ensured correct model estimation through synthetic data simulations. Subsequently, we used model comparisons to assess the underlying nature of recovery within our empirical recovery data. The first model comparison, relying on the conventional fraction of patients called 'fitters', pointed to a combination of proportional to lost function and constant recovery. 'Proportional to lost' here describes the original notion of proportionality, indicating greater recovery in case of a more severe initial impairment. This combination explained only 32% of the variance in recovery, which is in stark contrast to previous reports of >80%. When instead analysing the complete spectrum of subjects, 'fitters' and 'non-fitters', a combination of proportional to spared function and constant recovery was favoured, implying a more significant improvement in case of more preserved function. Explained variance was at 53%. Therefore, our quantitative findings suggest that motor recovery post-stroke may exhibit some characteristics of proportionality. However, the variance explained was substantially reduced compared to what has previously been reported. This finding motivates future research moving beyond solely behaviour scores to explain stroke recovery and establish robust and discriminating single-subject predictions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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30. Acute ischaemic stroke alters the brain's preference for distinct dynamic connectivity states.
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Bonkhoff, Anna K, Espinoza, Flor A, Gazula, Harshvardhan, Vergara, Victor M, Hensel, Lukas, Michely, Jochen, Paul, Theresa, Rehme, Anne K, Volz, Lukas J, Fink, Gereon R, Calhoun, Vince D, and Grefkes, Christian
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FUNCTIONAL connectivity , *FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *STROKE , *NERVE tissue - Abstract
Acute ischaemic stroke disturbs healthy brain organization, prompting subsequent plasticity and reorganization to compensate for the loss of specialized neural tissue and function. Static resting state functional MRI studies have already furthered our understanding of cerebral reorganization by estimating stroke-induced changes in network connectivity aggregated over the duration of several minutes. In this study, we used dynamic resting state functional MRI analyses to increase temporal resolution to seconds and explore transient configurations of motor network connectivity in acute stroke. To this end, we collected resting state functional MRI data of 31 patients with acute ischaemic stroke and 17 age-matched healthy control subjects. Stroke patients presented with moderate to severe hand motor deficits. By estimating dynamic functional connectivity within a sliding window framework, we identified three distinct connectivity configurations of motor-related networks. Motor networks were organized into three regional domains, i.e. a cortical, subcortical and cerebellar domain. The dynamic connectivity patterns of stroke patients diverged from those of healthy controls depending on the severity of the initial motor impairment. Moderately affected patients (n = 18) spent significantly more time in a weakly connected configuration that was characterized by low levels of connectivity, both locally as well as between distant regions. In contrast, severely affected patients (n = 13) showed a significant preference for transitions into a spatially segregated connectivity configuration. This configuration featured particularly high levels of local connectivity within the three regional domains as well as anti-correlated connectivity between distant networks across domains. A third connectivity configuration represented an intermediate connectivity pattern compared to the preceding two, and predominantly encompassed decreased interhemispheric connectivity between cortical motor networks independent of individual deficit severity. Alterations within this third configuration thus closely resembled previously reported ones originating from static resting state functional MRI studies post-stroke. In summary, acute ischaemic stroke not only prompted changes in connectivity between distinct networks, but it also caused characteristic changes in temporal properties of large-scale network interactions depending on the severity of the individual deficit. These findings offer new vistas on the dynamic neural mechanisms underlying acute neurological symptoms, cortical reorganization and treatment effects in stroke patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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31. Distinct Constructs Underlie Patient‐Reported and Performance‐Rated Outcomes after Stroke.
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DiCarlo, Julie A., Jaywant, Abhishek, Gochyyev, Perman, Bonkhoff, Anna K., Hardstone, Richard, Erler, Kimberly S., Ranford, Jessica, Cloutier, Alison, Ward, Nathan, Sloane, Kelly L., Schwamm, Lee H., Cramer, Steven C., and Lin, David J.
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PATIENTS' attitudes , *PARIETAL lobe , *PYRAMIDAL tract , *FACTOR structure , *BRAIN damage - Abstract
Objective Methods Results Interpretation Patient‐reported outcome measures (PROMs), which capture patients' perspectives on the consequences of health and disease, are widely used in neurological care and research. However, it is unclear how PROMs relate to performance‐rated impairments. Sociodemographic factors are known to affect PROMs. Direct damage to brain regions critical for self‐awareness (i.e., parietal regions and the salience/ventral‐attention network) may also impair self‐report outcomes. This study examined the relationship between PROMs and performance‐based measures in stroke survivors with arm motor impairments. We hypothesized that PROMs would be distinct from performance‐based outcomes, influenced by sociodemographic factors, and linked to damage in brain circuits involved in self‐perception.We longitudinally assessed 54 stroke survivors using patient‐reported and performance‐rated measures at 4 timepoints. We used factor analysis to reveal the outcome battery's factorial structure. Linear regression examined the association between classes of measures and sociodemographics. Voxel‐lesion‐symptom‐mapping, region‐of‐interest‐based analysis, and voxel‐lesion‐network‐mapping investigated the relationship between classes of outcomes and stroke‐related injury.Performance‐based and patient‐reported measures formed distinct factors, consistent across recovery phases. Higher education (β1 = 0.36, p = 0.02) and income adequacy (β2 = 0.48, p = 0.05) were associated with patient‐reported, but not performance‐rated outcomes. Greater parietal lobe injury, irrespective of hemisphere, was associated with worse patient‐reported outcomes; greater corticospinal tract injury related to worse performance‐rated outcomes. Lesions with greater functional connectivity to the salience/ventral‐attention network were associated with worse patient‐reported outcomes (r = −0.35, p = 0.009).Our findings reveal important differences between performance‐rated and patient‐reported outcomes, each with specific associated factors and anatomy post‐stroke. Incorporating sociodemographic and neuroanatomic characteristics into neurorehabilitation strategies may inform and optimize patient outcomes. ANN NEUROL 2024 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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32. Neuroimaging markers of patient-reported outcome measures in acute ischemic stroke.
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Oliveira LC, Bonkhoff AK, Regenhardt RW, Alhadid K, Tuozzo C, Etherton MR, Rost NS, and Schirmer MD
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Objectives: To determine the relationship between patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) and volumetric imaging markers in acute ischemic stroke (AIS)., Patients and Methods: Patients presenting at Massachusetts General Hospital between February 14, 2017 and February 5, 2020 with a confirmed AIS by MRI were eligible and underwent a telephone interview including PROM-10 questionnaires 3-15 months after stroke. White matter hyperintensity (V
WMH ) and brain volumes (VBrain ) were automatically determined using admission clinical MRI. Stroke lesions were manually segmented and volumes calculated (VLesion ). Multivariable and ordinal regression analyses were performed to identify associations between global and PROM-10 subscores with brain volumetrics and clinical variables., Results: Utilizing data from 167 patients (mean age: 64.7; 41.9% female), higher VWMH was associated with worse global physical (β=-0.6), global mental (β=-0.65), physical health (OR=0.68), social satisfaction (OR=0.66), fatigue (OR=0.69) and social activities (OR=0.59) scores. Higher VLesion was associated with poorer global mental (β=-0.79), mental health (OR=0.68), physical (OR=0.66) and social activities (OR=0.55), and emotional distress (OR=0.68) scores. Higher VBrain was linked to better global mental (β=0.93), global physical (β=0.79), mental health (OR=1.54) and physical activities (OR=1.72) scores., Conclusions: Neuroimaging biomarkers were significantly associated with PROMs, where higher VWMH and VLesion led to worse outcome, while higher VBrain was protective. The inclusion of neuroimaging analyses and PROMs in routine assessment provides enhanced understanding of post-stroke outcomes.- Published
- 2023
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33. Spoke-administered thrombolysis improves large vessel occlusion early recanalization: the real-world experience of a large academic hub-and-spoke telestroke network.
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Kraft AW, Regenhardt RW, Awad A, Rosenthal JA, Dmytriw AA, Vranic JE, Bonkhoff AK, Bretzner M, Hirsch JA, Rabinov JD, Stapleton CJ, Schwamm LH, Singhal AB, Rost NS, Leslie-Mazwi TM, and Patel AB
- Abstract
Introduction: Intravenous thrombolysis (IVT) prior to mechanical thrombectomy (MT) for large vessel occlusion (LVO) stroke is increasingly controversial. Recent trials support MT without IVT for patients presenting directly to MT-capable "hub" centers. However, bypassing IVT has not been evaluated for patients presenting to IVT-capable "spoke" hospitals that require hub transfer for MT. A perceived lack of efficacy of IVT to result in LVO early recanalization (ER) is often cited to support bypassing IVT, but ER data for IVT in patients that require interhospital transfer is limited. Here we examined LVO ER rates after spoke-administered IVT in our hub-and-spoke stroke network., Methods: Patients presenting to 25 spokes before hub transfer for MT consideration from 2018-2020 were retrospectively identified from a prospectively maintained database. Inclusion criteria were pre-transfer CTA-defined LVO, ASPECTS ≥6, and post-transfer repeat vessel imaging., Results: Of 167 patients, median age was 69 and 51% were female. 76 received spoke IVT (+spokeIVT) and 91 did not (-spokeIVT). Alteplase was the only IVT used in this study. Comorbidities and NIHSS were similar between groups. ER frequency was increased 7.2-fold in +spokeIVT patients [12/76 (15.8%) vs. 2/91 (2.2%), P<0.001]. Spoke-administered IVT was independently associated with ER (aOR=11.5, 95% CI=2.2,99.6, p<0.05) after adjusting for timing of last known well, interhospital transfer, and repeat vessel imaging. Interval NIHSS was improved in patients with ER (median -2 (IQR -6.3, -0.8) vs. 0 (-2.5, 1), p<0.05)., Conclusion: Within our network, +spokeIVT patients had a 7.2-fold increased ER relative likelihood. This real-world analysis supports IVT use in eligible patients with LVO at spoke hospitals before hub transfer for MT.
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- 2023
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34. Direct to angio-suite large vessel occlusion transfers achieve faster arrival-to-puncture times and improved outcomes.
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Regenhardt RW, Rosenthal JA, Dmytriw AA, Vranic JE, Bonkhoff AK, Bretzner M, Hirsch JA, Rabinov JD, Stapleton CJ, Patel AB, Singhal AB, Rost NS, Leslie-Mazwi TM, and Etherton MR
- Abstract
Introduction: For patients with large vessel occlusion (LVO) stroke, time to treatment with endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) is crucial to prevent infarction and improve outcomes. We sought to evaluate the hub arrival-to-puncture times and outcomes for transferred patients accepted directly to the angio-suite (LVO2OR) versus those accepted through the emergency department (ED) in a hub-and-spoke telestroke network., Methods: Consecutive patients transferred for EVT with spoke CTA-confirmed LVO, spoke ASPECTS >6, and LKW-to-hub arrival <6 hours were identified. Our LVO2OR protocol began implementation in January 2017. The LVO2OR cohort includes patients who underwent EVT from July 2017 to October 2020; the ED cohort includes those from January 2011 to December 2016. Hub arrival-to-puncture time and 90-day modified Rankin Scale (mRS) were prospectively recorded., Results: The LVO2OR cohort was comprised of 91 patients and the ED cohort 90. LVO2OR patients had more atrial fibrillation (AF, 51% vs 32%, p=0.02) and more M2 occlusions (27% vs 10%, p=0.01). LVO2OR patients had faster median hub arrival-to-puncture time (11 vs 92 minutes, p<0.001), faster median telestroke consult-to-puncture time (2.4 vs 3.6 hours, p<0.001), greater TICI 2b-3 reperfusion (92% vs 69%, p<0.001), and greater 90-day mRS <2 (35% vs 21%, p=0.04). In a multivariable model, LVO2OR significantly increased the odds of 90-day mRS <2 (aOR 2.77, 95%CI 1.07,7.20; p=0.04) even when controlling for age, baseline mRS, AF, NIHSS, M2 location, and TICI 2b-3., Conclusion: In a hub-and-spoke telestroke network, accepting transferred patients directly to the angio-suite was associated with dramatically reduced hub arrival-to-puncture time and may lead to improved 90-day outcomes. Direct-to-angio-suite protocols should continue to be evaluated in other regions and telestroke models.
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- 2022
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35. Characterizing reasons for stroke thrombectomy ineligibility among potential candidates transferred in a hub-and-spoke network.
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Regenhardt RW, Awad A, Kraft AW, Rosenthal JA, Dmytriw AA, Vranic JE, Bonkhoff AK, Bretzner M, Etherton MR, Hirsch JA, Rabinov JD, Singhal AB, Rost NS, Stapleton CJ, Leslie-Mazwi TM, and Patel AB
- Abstract
Background: Access to endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) is relatively limited. Hub-and-spoke networks seek to transfer appropriate large vessel occlusion (LVO) candidates to EVT-capable hubs. However, some patients are ineligible upon hub arrival, and factors that drive transfer inefficiencies are not well described. We sought to quantify EVT transfer efficiency and identify reasons for EVT ineligibility., Methods: Consecutive EVT candidates presenting to 25 spokes from 2018-2020 with pre-transfer CTA-defined LVO and ASPECTS ≥6 were identified from a prospectively maintained database. Outcomes of interest included hub EVT, reasons for EVT ineligibility, and 90-day modified Rankin Scale (mRS) ≤2., Results: Among 258 patients, the median age was 70 years (IQR 60-81); 50% were female. 56% were ineligible for EVT after hub arrival. Cited reasons were large established infarct (49%), mild symptoms (33%), recanalization (6%), distal occlusion (5%), sub-occlusive lesion (3%), and goals of care (3%). Late window patients [last known well (LKW) >6 hours] were more likely to be ineligible (67% vs 43%, P<0.0001). EVT ineligible patients were older (73 vs 68 years, p=0.04), had lower NIHSS (10 vs 16, p<0.0001), longer LKW-hub arrival time (8.4 vs 4.6 hours, p<0.0001), longer spoke Telestroke consult-hub arrival time (2.8 vs 2.2 hours, p<0.0001), and received less intravenous thrombolysis (32% vs 45%, p=0.04) compared to eligible patients. EVT ineligibility independently reduced the odds of 90-day mRS≤2 (aOR=0.26, 95%CI=0.12,0.56; p=0.001) when controlling for age, NIHSS, and LKW-hub arrival time., Conclusions: Among patients transferred for EVT, there are multiple reasons for ineligibility upon hub arrival, with most excluded for infarct growth and mild symptoms. Understanding factors that drive transfer inefficiencies is important to improve EVT access and outcomes.
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- 2022
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36. Generative lesion pattern decomposition of cognitive impairment after stroke.
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Bonkhoff AK, Lim JS, Bae HJ, Weaver NA, Kuijf HJ, Biesbroek JM, Rost NS, and Bzdok D
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Cognitive impairment is a frequent and disabling sequela of stroke. There is however incomplete understanding of how lesion topographies in the left and right cerebral hemisphere brain interact to cause distinct cognitive deficits. We integrated machine learning and Bayesian hierarchical modelling to enable a hemisphere-aware analysis of 1080 acute ischaemic stroke patients with deep profiling ∼3 months after stroke. We show the relevance of the left hemisphere in the prediction of language and memory assessments and relevance of the right hemisphere in the prediction of visuospatial functioning. Global cognitive impairments were equally well predicted by lesion topographies from both sides. Damage to the hippocampal and occipital regions on the left was particularly informative about lost naming and memory functions, while damage to these regions on the right was linked to lost visuospatial functioning. Global cognitive impairment was predominantly linked to lesioned tissue in the supramarginal and angular gyrus, the post-central gyrus as well as the lateral occipital and opercular cortices of the left hemisphere. Hence, our analysis strategy uncovered that lesion patterns with unique hemispheric distributions are characteristic of how cognitive capacity is lost due to ischaemic brain tissue damage., (© The Author(s) (2021). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain.)
- Published
- 2021
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