Abstract

IntroductionStroke is one of the leading causes of substantial disability worldwide. Previous studies have shown brain functional and structural alterations in adults with stroke. However, few studies have examined the longitudinal reorganization in whole-brain structural networks in stroke.MethodsHere, we applied graph theoretical analysis to investigate the longitudinal topological organization of white matter networks in 20 ischemic stroke patients with a one-month interval between two timepoints. Two sets of clinical scores, Fugl-Meyer motor assessment (FMA) and neurological deficit scores (NDS), were assessed for all patients on the day the image data were collected.ResultsThe stroke patients exhibited significant increases in FMA scores and significant reductions in DNS between the two timepoints. All groups exhibited small-world organization (σ > 1) in the brain structural network, including a high clustering coefficient (γ > 1) and a low normalized characteristic path length (λ ≈ 1). However, compared to healthy controls, stroke patients showed significant decrease in nodal characteristics at the first timepoint, primarily in the right supplementary motor area, right middle temporal gyrus, right inferior parietal lobe, right postcentral gyrus and left posterior cingulate gyrus. Longitudinal results demonstrated that altered nodal characteristics were partially restored one month later. Additionally, significant correlations between the nodal characteristics of the right supplementary motor area and the clinical scale scores (FMA and NDS) were observed in stroke patients. Similar behavioral-neuroimaging correlations were found in the right inferior parietal lobe.ConclusionAltered topological properties may be an effect of stroke, which can be modulated during recovery. The longitudinal results and the neuroimaging-behavioral relationship may provide information for understanding brain recovery from stroke. Future studies should detect whether observed changes in structural topological properties can predict the recovery of daily cognitive function in stroke.

Highlights

  • Stroke is one of the leading causes of substantial disability worldwide

  • We found that the increased nodal efficiency in the left posterior cingulate gyrus (PCG) of stroke patients was reduced to nearly normal levels at the second timepoint compared with that of the HCs

  • The present study found that nodal efficiency in the right inferior parietal lobe (IPL) was significantly correlated with clinical scores of Fugl-Meyer motor assessment (FMA) and neurological deficit scores (NDS) in stroke patients

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Summary

Introduction

Stroke is one of the leading causes of substantial disability worldwide. Previous studies have shown brain functional and structural alterations in adults with stroke. Disrupted brain functional connectivity between paired cortical motor-related regions showed recovery to nearly normal levels in stroke patients under clinical treatment [18]. A longitudinal study of WM integrity in stroke showed that early dynamic changes of fractional anisotropy (FA) in the corpus callosum within the first 3 months after stroke can predict people’s recovery with the correction of infarct location and extent [7]. Despite these advances in the stroke-related reorganization literatures, little is known concerning how the topological properties of the whole-brain network evolve longitudinally after stroke

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