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Trail Making Test Elucidates Neural Substrates of Specific Poststroke Executive Dysfunctions

Authors :
Fu Qiang Gao
Novena Rangwala
Yeonwook Kang
Christopher J.M. Scott
Alex Kiss
Erin Gibson
Alicia A. McNeely
Kie Honjo
David L. Nyenhuis
Simon J. Graham
Joel Ramirez
Donald T. Stuss
Byung-Chul Lee
Anoop Ganda
Jiali Zhao
Nancy J. Lobaugh
Robin D. J. Harry
Benjamin Lam
X. Joe Zhou
Sandra E. Black
Ryan T. Muir
Source :
Stroke. 46:2755-2761
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2015.

Abstract

Background and Purpose— Poststroke cognitive impairment is typified by prominent deficits in processing speed and executive function. However, the underlying neuroanatomical substrates of executive deficits are not well understood, and further elucidation is needed. There may be utility in fractionating executive functions to delineate neural substrates. Methods— One test amenable to fine delineation is the Trail Making Test (TMT), which emphasizes processing speed (TMT-A) and set shifting (TMT-B-A difference, proportion, quotient scores, and TMT-B set-shifting errors). The TMT was administered to 2 overt ischemic stroke cohorts from a multinational study: (1) a chronic stroke cohort (N=61) and (2) an acute–subacute stroke cohort (N=45). Volumetric quantification of ischemic stroke and white matter hyperintensities was done on magnetic resonance imaging, along with ratings of involvement of cholinergic projections, using the previously published cholinergic hyperintensities projections scale. Damage to the superior longitudinal fasciculus, which colocalizes with some cholinergic projections, was also documented. Results— Multiple linear regression analyses were completed. Although larger infarcts ( β =0.37, P β =0.39, P β =0.17, P =0.03). These findings were replicated in both cohorts. Patients with ≥2 TMT-B set-shifting errors also had greater cholinergic hyperintensities projections scale severity. Conclusions— In this multinational stroke cohort study, damage to lateral cholinergic pathways and the superior longitudinal fasciculus emerged as significant neuroanatomical correlates for executive deficits in set shifting.

Details

ISSN :
15244628 and 00392499
Volume :
46
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Stroke
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1e36fa935bfc8f0946be8567f6be2867
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1161/strokeaha.115.009936