1. Atypical language organization following perinatal infarctions of the left hemisphere is associated with structural changes in right-hemispheric grey matter.
- Author
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Schnaufer L, Gschaidmeier A, Heimgärtner M, Driever PH, Hauser TK, Wilke M, Lidzba K, and Staudt M
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Child, Adolescent, Young Adult, Adult, Brain Mapping methods, Cross-Sectional Studies, Language, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Infarction, Functional Laterality, Gray Matter diagnostic imaging, Gray Matter pathology, Brain
- Abstract
Aim: To assess how atypical language organization after early left-hemispheric brain lesions affects grey matter in the contralesional hemisphere., Method: This was a cross-sectional study with between-group comparisons of 14 patients (six female, 8-26 years) with perinatal left-hemispheric brain lesions (two arterial ischemic strokes, 11 periventricular haemorrhagic infarctions, one without classification) and 14 typically developing age-matched controls (TDC) with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) documented left-hemispheric language organization (six female, 8-28 years). MRI data were analysed with SPM12, CAT12, and custom scripts. Language lateralization indices were determined by fMRI within a prefrontal mask and right-hemispheric grey matter group differences by voxel-based morphometry (VBM)., Results: FMRI revealed left-dominance in seven patients with typical language organization (TYP) and right-dominance in seven patients with atypical language organization (ATYP) of 14 patients. VBM analysis of all patients versus controls showed grey matter reductions in the middle temporal gyrus of patients. A comparison between the two patient subgroups revealed an increase of grey matter in the middle frontal gyrus in the ATYP group. Voxel-based regression analysis confirmed that grey matter increases in the middle frontal gyrus were correlated with atypical language organization., Interpretation: Compatible with a non-specific lesion effect, we found areas of grey matter reduction in patients as compared to TDC. The grey matter increase in the middle frontal gyrus seems to reflect a specific compensatory effect in patients with atypical language organization., What This Paper Adds: Perinatal stroke leads to decreased grey matter in the contralesional hemisphere. Atypical language organization is associated with grey matter increases in contralesional language areas., (© 2023 The Authors. Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Mac Keith Press.)
- Published
- 2024
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