磁共振弥散成像
医学
中风恢复
冲程(发动机)
皮质脊髓束
物理医学与康复
康复
神经学
神经组阅片室
白质
神经可塑性
生物标志物
临床试验
纤维束成像
物理疗法
磁共振成像
放射科
病理
化学
工程类
精神科
机械工程
生物化学
作者
Josep Puig,Gerard Blasco,Gottfried Schlaug,Cathy M. Stinear,Pepus Daunis‐i‐Estadella,Carles Biarnés,Jaume Figueras,Joaquı́n Serena,María Hernández‐Pérez,Ángel Alberich-Bayarri,Mar Castellanos,David S Liebeskind,Andrew M. Demchuk,Bijoy K Menon,Götz Thomalla,Kambiz Nael,Max Wintermark,Salvador Pedraza
出处
期刊:Neuroradiology
[Springer Science+Business Media]
日期:2017-03-14
卷期号:59 (4): 343-351
被引量:106
标识
DOI:10.1007/s00234-017-1816-0
摘要
Despite improved acute treatment and new tools to facilitate recovery, most patients have motor deficits after stroke, often causing disability. However, motor impairment varies considerably among patients, and recovery in the acute/subacute phase is difficult to predict using clinical measures alone, particularly in severely impaired patients. Accurate early prediction of recovery would help rationalize rehabilitation goals and improve the design of trials testing strategies to facilitate recovery. We review the role of diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) in predicting motor recovery after stroke, in monitoring treatment response, and in evaluating white matter remodeling. We critically appraise DTI studies and discuss their limitations, and we explore directions for future study. Growing evidence suggests that combining clinical scores with information about corticospinal tract (CST) integrity can improve predictions about motor outcome. The extent of CST damage on DTI and/or the overlap between the CST and a lesion are key prognostic factor that determines motor performance and outcome. Three main strategies to quantify stroke-related CST damage have been proposed: (i) measuring FA distal to the stroke area, (ii) measuring the number of fibers that go through the stroke with tractography, and (iii) measuring the overlap between the stroke and a CST map derived from healthy age- and gender-matched controls. Recovery of motor function probably involves remodeling of the CST proper and/or a greater reliance on alternative motor tracts through spontaneous and treatment-induced plasticity. DTI-metrics represent promising clinical biomarkers to predict motor recovery and to monitor and predict the response to neurorehabilitative interventions.
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