ePoster Presentations – Stroke
EP 1. Brain activity after acute left hemispheric stroke in imitation and tool associated actions

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clinph.2016.05.057Get rights and content

Background

Apraxia, a disorder of higher motor control, frequently leads to impaired tool use or imitation capacities due to left hemispheric lesions. However, despite similar lesion size or location, patients present with different apraxic deficits thus different early reorganization mechanism may be assumed. To understand the impaired praxis network after stroke on a functional level, we correlated behavioral performance in imitation and tool use tasks with activation patterns in fMRI of 47 acute left-hemispheric stroke patients.

Methods

A cohort of 47 acute stroke patients (mean age 63.5 years ± SD 13.6; 13 female) with first ever embolic stroke in the left arteria cerebri media territory were tested for deficits in imitation of meaningless hand and finger postures and tool associated actions (pantomime of tool use, imitation of tool use, actual tool use). Testing was performed mean 4.8 days ± SD 2.9 post stroke. FMRI was acquired during presentation of video sequences of tool-associated actions viewed from a first-person perspective.

Voxel wise linear regression analyses for task scores only and with lesion volume as covariate as well as group differences for categorized behavioral performance (deficit vs. no deficit) were calculated to analyze activity associated with behavioral performance in tool use and meaningless imitation. Analyses were performed using GLMflex. Results are presented on a p < 0.001 level.

Results

Intact imitation of meaningless postures was associated with activation in the left middle occipital gyrus as well as in the left superior temporal lobe in linear regression analyses and categorical group differences (deficit vs. no deficit).

Tool associated tasks correlated with activation in the left supramarginal gyrus and superior temporal lobe without occipital activation. For group differences in pantomime of tool use (deficit vs. no deficit) an additional activation for patients with low behavioral performance could be found in the posterior middle temporal gyrus.

Conclusion

For intact imitation of meaningless postures and tool associated actions, specific left hemispheric activation patterns in the acute phase after stroke could be determined. These areas are commonly associated to the left hemispheric praxis network. While intact imitation of meaningless gestures seems to rely on intact left middle occipital gyrus for visual analysis of the presented movement tool associated actions rather seem to rely on integrity of the supramarginal gyrus, known to store movement engrams. Patients with deficits in pantomime of tool use additionally show activation of posterior middle temporal gyrus for semantic movement information. These mechanisms possibly can be interpreted as early compensatory effort.

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