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The Additional Contribution of White Matter Hyperintensity Location to Post-stroke Cognitive Impairment: Insights From a Multiple-Lesion Symptom Mapping Study.

Authors :
Zhao, Lei
Wong, Adrian
Luo, Yishan
Liu, Wenyan
Chu, Winnie W. C.
Abrigo, Jill M.
Lee, Ryan K. L.
Mok, Vincent
Shi, Lin
Source :
Frontiers in Neuroscience; 5/1/2018, p1-N.PAG, 15p
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

White matter hyperintensities (WMH) are common in acute ischemic stroke patients. Although WMH volume has been reported to influence post-stroke cognition, it is still not clear whether WMH location, independent of acute ischemic lesion (AIL) volume and location, contributes to cognitive impairment after stroke. Here, we proposed a multiple-lesion symptom mapping model that considers both the presence of WMH and AIL to measure the additional contribution of WMH locations to post-stroke cognitive impairment. Seventy-six first-ever stroke patients with AILs in the left hemisphere were examined by Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) at baseline and 1 year after stroke. The association between the location of AIL and WMH and global cognition was investigated by a multiple-lesion symptom mapping (MLSM) model based on support vector regression (SVR). To explore the relative merits of MLSM over the existing lesion-symptom mapping approaches with only AIL considered (mass-univariate VLSM and SVR-LSM), we measured the contribution of the significant AIL and/orWMH clusters from these models to post-stroke cognitive impairment. In addition, we compared the significant WMH locations identified by the optimal SVR-MLSM model for cognitive impairment at baseline and 1 year post stroke. The identified strategic locations of WMH significantly contributed to the prediction of MoCA at baseline (short-term) and 1 year (long-term) after stroke independent of the strategic locations of AIL. The significant clusters of WMH for short-term and long-term post-stroke cognitive impairment were mainly in the corpus callosum, corona radiata, and posterior thalamic radiation. We noted that in some regions, the AIL clusters that were significant for short-term outcome were no longer significant for long-termoutcome, and interestinglymoreWMH clusters in these regions became significant for long-term outcome compared to short-term outcome. This indicated that there are some regions where local WMH burden has larger impact than AIL burden on the long-term post-stroke cognitive impairment. In consequence, SVR-MLSM was effective in identifying theWMH locations that have additional impact on post-stroke cognition on top of AIL locations. Such amethod can also be applied to other lesion-behavior studies where multiple types of lesions may have potential contributions to a specific behavior. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16624548
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Frontiers in Neuroscience
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
129413783
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2018.00290