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Rethinking interhemispheric imbalance as a target for stroke neurorehabilitation

Authors :
Xu, Jing; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0388-5046
Branscheidt, Meret
Schambra, Heidi
Steiner, Levke
Widmer, Mario
Diedrichsen, Jörn
Goldsmith, Jeff
Lindquist, Martin
Kitago, Tomoko
Luft, Andreas R
Krakauer, John W
Celnik, Pablo A
SMARTS Study Group
Xu, Jing; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0388-5046
Branscheidt, Meret
Schambra, Heidi
Steiner, Levke
Widmer, Mario
Diedrichsen, Jörn
Goldsmith, Jeff
Lindquist, Martin
Kitago, Tomoko
Luft, Andreas R
Krakauer, John W
Celnik, Pablo A
SMARTS Study Group
Source :
Xu, Jing; Branscheidt, Meret; Schambra, Heidi; Steiner, Levke; Widmer, Mario; Diedrichsen, Jörn; Goldsmith, Jeff; Lindquist, Martin; Kitago, Tomoko; Luft, Andreas R; Krakauer, John W; Celnik, Pablo A; SMARTS Study Group (2019). Rethinking interhemispheric imbalance as a target for stroke neurorehabilitation. Annals of Neurology, 85(4):502-513.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

OBJECTIVE Patients with chronic stroke have been shown to have failure to release interhemispheric inhibition (IHI) from the intact to the damaged hemisphere before movement execution (premovement IHI). This inhibitory imbalance was found to correlate with poor motor performance in the chronic stage after stroke and has since become a target for therapeutic interventions. The logic of this approach, however, implies that abnormal premovement IHI is causal to poor behavioral outcome and should therefore be present early after stroke when motor impairment is at its worst. To test this idea, in a longitudinal study, we investigated interhemispheric interactions by tracking patients' premovement IHI for one year following stroke. METHODS We assessed premovement IHI and motor behavior five times over a 1-year period after ischemic stroke in 22 patients and 11 healthy participants. RESULTS We found that premovement IHI was normal during the acute/subacute period and only became abnormal at the chronic stage; specifically, release of IHI in movement preparation worsened as motor behavior improved. In addition, premovement IHI did not correlate with behavioral measures cross-sectionally, whereas the longitudinal emergence of abnormal premovement IHI from the acute to the chronic stage was inversely correlated with recovery of finger individuation. INTERPRETATION These results suggest that interhemispheric imbalance is not a cause of poor motor recovery, but instead might be the consequence of underlying recovery processes. These findings call into question the rehabilitation strategy of attempting to rebalance interhemispheric interactions in order to improve motor recovery after stroke. Ann Neurol 2019;85:502-513.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Xu, Jing; Branscheidt, Meret; Schambra, Heidi; Steiner, Levke; Widmer, Mario; Diedrichsen, Jörn; Goldsmith, Jeff; Lindquist, Martin; Kitago, Tomoko; Luft, Andreas R; Krakauer, John W; Celnik, Pablo A; SMARTS Study Group (2019). Rethinking interhemispheric imbalance as a target for stroke neurorehabilitation. Annals of Neurology, 85(4):502-513.
Notes :
application/pdf, info:doi/10.5167/uzh-176403, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1416176247
Document Type :
Electronic Resource