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Linking lesions in sensorimotor cortex to contralateral hand function in multiple sclerosis:A 7 T MRI study
- Source :
- Madsen , M A J , Wiggermann , V , Marques , M F M , Lundell , H , Cerri , S , Puonti , O , Blinkenberg , M , Romme Christensen , J , Sellebjerg , F & Siebner , H R 2022 , ' Linking lesions in sensorimotor cortex to contralateral hand function in multiple sclerosis : A 7 T MRI study ' , Brain , vol. 145 , no. 10 , pp. 3522-3535 .
- Publication Year :
- 2022
-
Abstract
- Cortical lesions constitute a key manifestation of multiple sclerosis and contribute to clinical disability and cognitive impairment. Yet it is unknown whether local cortical lesions and cortical lesion subtypes contribute to domain-specific impairments attributable to the function of the lesioned cortex. In this cross-sectional study, we assessed how cortical lesions in the primary sensorimotor hand area relate to corticomotor physiology and sensorimotor function of the contralateral hand. Fifty relapse-free patients with relapsing-remitting or secondary-progressive multiple sclerosis and 28 healthy age- and sex-matched participants underwent whole-brain 7 T MRI to map cortical lesions. Brain scans were also used to estimate normalized brain volume, pericentral cortical thickness, white matter lesion fraction of the corticospinal tract, infratentorial lesion volume and the cross-sectional area of the upper cervical spinal cord. We tested sensorimotor hand function and calculated a motor and sensory composite score for each hand. In 37 patients and 20 healthy controls, we measured maximal motor-evoked potential amplitude, resting motor threshold and corticomotor conduction time with transcranial magnetic stimulation and the N20 latency from somatosensory-evoked potentials. Patients showed at least one cortical lesion in the primary sensorimotor hand area in 47 of 100 hemispheres. The presence of a lesion was associated with worse contralateral sensory (P = 0.014) and motor (P = 0.009) composite scores. Transcranial magnetic stimulation of a lesion-positive primary sensorimotor hand area revealed a decreased maximal motor-evoked potential amplitude (P < 0.001) and delayed corticomotor conduction (P = 0.002) relative to a lesion-negative primary sensorimotor hand area. Stepwise mixed linear regressions showed that the presence of a primary sensorimotor hand area lesion, higher white-matter lesion fraction of the corticospinal tract, reduced spinal cord cross-sec
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Journal :
- Madsen , M A J , Wiggermann , V , Marques , M F M , Lundell , H , Cerri , S , Puonti , O , Blinkenberg , M , Romme Christensen , J , Sellebjerg , F & Siebner , H R 2022 , ' Linking lesions in sensorimotor cortex to contralateral hand function in multiple sclerosis : A 7 T MRI study ' , Brain , vol. 145 , no. 10 , pp. 3522-3535 .
- Notes :
- application/pdf, English
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1382520776
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource