Abstract

Understanding how structural and functional reorganization occurs is crucial for stroke diagnosis and prognosis. Previous magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies focused on the analyses of a single modality and demonstrated abnormalities in both lesion regions and their associated distal regions. However, the relationships of multimodality alterations and their associations with poststroke motor deficits are still unclear. In this study, 71 hemiplegia patients and 41 matched healthy controls (HCs) were recruited and underwent MRI examination at baseline and at 2-week follow-up sessions. A multimodal fusion approach (multimodal canonical correlation analysis + joint independent component analysis), with amplitude of low-frequency fluctuation (ALFF) and gray matter volume (GMV) as features, was used to extract the co-altered patterns of brain structure and function. Then compared the changes in patients' brain structure and function between baseline and follow-up sessions. Compared with HCs, the brain structure and function of stroke patients decreased synchronously in the local lesions and their associated distal regions. Damage to structure and function in the local lesion regions was associated with motor function. After 2 weeks, ALFF in the local lesion regions was increased, while GMV did not improve. Taken together, the brain structure and function in the local lesions and their associated distal regions were damaged synchronously after ischemic stroke, while during motor recovery, the 2 modalities were changed separately.

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