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Diffusion MRI in corticofugal fibers correlates with hand function in unilateral cerebral palsy

Diffusion MRI in corticofugal fibers correlates with hand function in unilateral cerebral palsy
Diffusion MRI in corticofugal fibers correlates with hand function in unilateral cerebral palsy
Diffusion MRI improves detection of abnormalities in white matter tracts in cerebral palsy (CP). Relationships between diffusion measurements and hand function are largely unexplored. We aimed first to assess microstructure of corticofugal fibers, and second to explore associations between tract injury as assessed by quantitative analysis of diffusion MRI and hand function in children with unilateral CP.

Methods: In this cross-sectional study, 15 children with unilateral CP (6 boys, median age 12.4 years, min 7.2, max 17) and 24 controls were included (9 boys, median age 12.7 years, min 8.8, max 17.3). Hand function was assessed with the Box and Blocks (B&B) test. Magnetic resonance diffusion data (b value = 1,000 s/mm2, 45 directions) were collected on a 1.5-T scanner. Fractional anisotropy (FA), mean diffusivity (MD), and tensor eigenvalues were measured bilaterally in the cerebral peduncle (ROI1), the posterior limb of the internal capsule (PLIC, ROI2), and corticofugal fibers connecting these regions.

Results: In children with CP, FA in both ROIs and the partial tract corresponding to the affected hand was significantly lower compared to controls. This was caused by an increase in diffusivity perpendicular to the tract. After controlling for age, mean FA contralateral to the affected hand correlated with B&B scores, which was independent of lesion type or number of voxels in the partial tract, cerebral peduncle, or PLIC.

Conclusions: FA in corticofugal fibers is a sensitive marker of damage to the motor system and correlates with hand function in CP. Using FA may improve early prediction of outcome.
0028-3878
775-783
Holmström, L.
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Lennartsson, F.
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Eliasson, A-C.
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Flodmark, O.
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Clarke, C.
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Tedroff, K.
a6ab151f-3d1c-4f91-9428-355e88f2613d
Forssberg, H.
cc4374e9-ed87-436a-9872-8127e50add00
Vollmer, B.
044f8b55-ba36-4fb2-8e7e-756ab77653ba
Holmström, L.
f5361cfc-da74-4c89-be0b-44f0b5fe2e3f
Lennartsson, F.
5ae708dc-a5b6-4dfa-abe7-1f08b1918dd0
Eliasson, A-C.
61644c40-5d42-4fe6-89c1-6f1a73b943cb
Flodmark, O.
4a403135-f5f1-4656-802c-333e8df44742
Clarke, C.
7f9f4377-ead5-4d08-8270-0e12e634b680
Tedroff, K.
a6ab151f-3d1c-4f91-9428-355e88f2613d
Forssberg, H.
cc4374e9-ed87-436a-9872-8127e50add00
Vollmer, B.
044f8b55-ba36-4fb2-8e7e-756ab77653ba

Holmström, L., Lennartsson, F., Eliasson, A-C., Flodmark, O., Clarke, C., Tedroff, K., Forssberg, H. and Vollmer, B. (2011) Diffusion MRI in corticofugal fibers correlates with hand function in unilateral cerebral palsy. Neurology, 77 (8), 775-783. (doi:10.1212/WNL.0b013e31822b0040). (PMID:21832221)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Diffusion MRI improves detection of abnormalities in white matter tracts in cerebral palsy (CP). Relationships between diffusion measurements and hand function are largely unexplored. We aimed first to assess microstructure of corticofugal fibers, and second to explore associations between tract injury as assessed by quantitative analysis of diffusion MRI and hand function in children with unilateral CP.

Methods: In this cross-sectional study, 15 children with unilateral CP (6 boys, median age 12.4 years, min 7.2, max 17) and 24 controls were included (9 boys, median age 12.7 years, min 8.8, max 17.3). Hand function was assessed with the Box and Blocks (B&B) test. Magnetic resonance diffusion data (b value = 1,000 s/mm2, 45 directions) were collected on a 1.5-T scanner. Fractional anisotropy (FA), mean diffusivity (MD), and tensor eigenvalues were measured bilaterally in the cerebral peduncle (ROI1), the posterior limb of the internal capsule (PLIC, ROI2), and corticofugal fibers connecting these regions.

Results: In children with CP, FA in both ROIs and the partial tract corresponding to the affected hand was significantly lower compared to controls. This was caused by an increase in diffusivity perpendicular to the tract. After controlling for age, mean FA contralateral to the affected hand correlated with B&B scores, which was independent of lesion type or number of voxels in the partial tract, cerebral peduncle, or PLIC.

Conclusions: FA in corticofugal fibers is a sensitive marker of damage to the motor system and correlates with hand function in CP. Using FA may improve early prediction of outcome.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 10 August 2011
Published date: 23 August 2011
Organisations: Clinical & Experimental Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 196221
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/196221
ISSN: 0028-3878
PURE UUID: 47ab4f75-e7a9-4c88-97cc-d7da2f18258e
ORCID for B. Vollmer: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4088-5336

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Date deposited: 05 Sep 2011 13:20
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:36

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Contributors

Author: L. Holmström
Author: F. Lennartsson
Author: A-C. Eliasson
Author: O. Flodmark
Author: C. Clarke
Author: K. Tedroff
Author: H. Forssberg
Author: B. Vollmer ORCID iD

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