Abstract

Background. A fraction of stroke survivors with chronic aphasia experience declines in language abilities over time, but the reason for this remains unclear. Objective. To evaluate the effect of leukoaraiosis on baseline aphasia severity and long-term changes in aphasia severity. This study directly compares the predictive capacity of leukoaraiosis severity to that of lesion damage, a factor known to account for a substantial proportion of variance in the degree of language impairment and recovery. Methods. Using a longitudinal database of behavioral and neuroimaging data from 35 individuals in the chronic stage of recovery after a single-event left-hemisphere stroke (9 females, mean stroke age = 55.8 ± 9.1 years, mean months poststroke at initial evaluation = 36.3 ± 40.8), we examined 2 lines of inquiry: (1) to what extent does leukoaraiosis severity at initial evaluation predict aphasia severity and (2) to what extent does leukoaraiosis severity at initial evaluation predict longitudinal change in aphasia severity. Participants underwent high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging for the purpose of lesion volume analysis and leukoaraiosis severity rating. Biographical information was also considered. Results. Lesion volume and time poststroke at initial assessment best predicted initial aphasia severity (adjusted R2 = 0.37). Leukoaraiosis severity and initial aphasia severity significantly predicted decline in language abilities at follow-up, accounting for approximately one-third of the variance (adjusted R2 = 0.33). More severe leukoaraiosis was associated with a 4.3 odds increase of decline. Conclusions. Leukoaraiosis is a significant risk factor for declining language abilities in aphasia and should be considered for better identification of individuals at risk for long-term decline, which can guide clinical decision making.

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