Correlation between spasticity and corticospinal/corticoreticular tract status in stroke patients after early stage.
Min Jye ChoSang Seok YeoSung Jun LeeSung-Ho JangPublished in: Medicine (2023)
We investigated the correlation between spasticity and the states of the corticospinal tract (CST) and corticoreticular tract (CRT) in stroke patients after early stage. Thirty-eight stroke patients and 26 healthy control subjects were recruited. The modified Ashworth scale (MAS) scale after the early stage (more than 1 month after onset) was used to determine the spasticity state of the stroke patients. Fractional anisotropy (FA), apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), fiber number (FN), and ipsilesional/contra-lesional ratios for diffusion tensor tractography (DTT) parameters of the CST and CRT after the early stage were measured in both ipsi- and contra-lesional hemispheres. This study was conducted retrospectively. The FA and FN CST-ratios in the patient group were significantly lower than those of the control group (P < .05), except for the ADC CST-ratio (P > .05). Regarding the DTT parameters of the CRT-ratio, the patient group FN value was significantly lower than that of the control group (P < .05), whereas the FA and ADC CRT-ratios did not show significant differences between the patient and control groups (P > .05). MAS scores showed a strong positive correlation with the ADC CRT-ratio (P < .05) and a moderate negative correlation with the FN CRT-ratio (P < .05). We observed that the injury severities of the CST and CRT were related to spasticity severity in chronic stroke patients; moreover, compared to the CST, CRT status was more closely related to spasticity severity.
Keyphrases
- early stage
- cardiac resynchronization therapy
- spinal cord injury
- diffusion weighted imaging
- botulinum toxin
- upper limb
- left ventricular
- heart failure
- sentinel lymph node
- case report
- diffusion weighted
- cerebral palsy
- children with cerebral palsy
- squamous cell carcinoma
- computed tomography
- mass spectrometry
- transcranial magnetic stimulation