Preparing for a Second Attack: A Lesion Simulation Study on Network Resilience After Stroke.

Details

Ressource 1Download: _van-assche-et-al-2022-preparing-for-a-second-attack-a-lesion-simulation-study-on-network-resilience-after-stroke_published.pdf (2769.00 [Ko])
State: Public
Version: author
License: CC BY 4.0
Serval ID
serval:BIB_77ECD8C5299B
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Preparing for a Second Attack: A Lesion Simulation Study on Network Resilience After Stroke.
Journal
Stroke
Author(s)
van Assche M., Klug J., Dirren E., Richiardi J., Carrera E.
ISSN
1524-4628 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0039-2499
Publication state
Published
Issued date
06/2022
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
53
Number
6
Pages
2038-2047
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Does the brain become more resilient after a first stroke to reduce the consequences of a new lesion? Although recurrent strokes are a major clinical issue, whether and how the brain prepares for a second attack is unknown. This is due to the difficulties to obtain an appropriate dataset of stroke patients with comparable lesions, imaged at the same interval after onset. Furthermore, timing of the recurrent event remains unpredictable.
Here, we used a novel clinical lesion simulation approach to test the hypothesis that resilience in brain networks increases during stroke recovery. Sixteen highly selected patients with a lesion restricted to the primary motor cortex were recruited. At 3 time points of the index event (10 days, 3 weeks, 3 months), we mimicked recurrent infarcts by deletion of nodes in brain networks (resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging). Graph measures were applied to determine resilience (global efficiency after attack) and wiring cost (mean degree) of the network.
At 10 days and 3 weeks after stroke, resilience was similar in patients and controls. However, at 3 months, although motor function had fully recovered, resilience to clinically representative simulated lesions was higher compared to controls (cortical lesion P=0.012; subcortical: P=0.009; cortico-subcortical: P=0.009). Similar results were found after random (P=0.012) and targeted (P=0.015) attacks.
Our results suggest that, in this highly selected cohort of patients with lesions restricted to the primary motor cortex, brain networks reconfigure to increase resilience to future insults. Lesion simulation is an innovative approach, which may have major implications for stroke therapy. Individualized neuromodulation strategies could be developed to foster resilient network reconfigurations after a first stroke to limit the consequences of future attacks.
Keywords
Brain/pathology, Brain Mapping, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods, Stroke/diagnostic imaging, Stroke/pathology, Stroke/therapy, connectivity, graph, magnetic resonance imaging, motor cortex, recovery, resilience, stroke
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
17/05/2022 9:56
Last modification date
31/10/2023 8:17
Usage data