Abstract

Introduction: MRI-detected white matter hyperintensity (WMH) burden is linked to the overall brain health and incident stroke outcomes. However, data are limited as to whether specific acute stroke lesion patterns purport greater stroke severity in patients with extensive pre-existing WMH. In this analysis, we sought to investigate lesion pattern-specific WMH effects on AIS severity. Methods: We analyzed clinical and lesion data from 621 AIS patients enrolled in the multi-site MRI-GENIE study. The acute NIHSS was modelled via Bayesian hierarchical regression. Using ten stroke lesion patterns, that served as input variables of main interest, we introduced a hierarchical level differentiating between patients with higher and lower than median WMH volume (WMHv). Lesion pattern posterior distributions for higher and lower WMHv patients were subtracted to infer substantial differences. Results: In this AIS cohort [age: 65.3±14.6, 60% male], a higher WMHv was associated with greater stroke severity only when specific left-hemispheric brain regions were infarcted. This “lesion pattern 3” was mainly characterized by left middle and inferior frontal gyrus, insular and opercular cortex, pre- and post-central gyrus, and subcortical basal ganglia regions ( Fig ). Conclusions: Higher WMH burden appears to enhance the detrimental effect of acute stroke lesions involving left-hemispheric brain regions underlying language and motor functions. This effect might be due to an exacerbated disruption of functional network integrity by the combination of WMH and stroke lesions and could be explored further in functional imaging studies that simultaneously considered information from both lesion types.

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