Cortico-spinal excitability and hand motor recovery in stroke: a longitudinal study

AbstractObjectiveTo describe the relationship between changes of cortico-spinal excitability and motor recovery of the affected hand after stroke.MethodsEighteen hemiparetic stroke patients with a severe-to-mild upper limb motor impairment were randomized. Cortico-spinal excitability measures (resting motor thresholds and motor evoked potentials) obtained from a distal (abductor pollicis brevis) and proximal (biceps brachii) upper limb muscle were assessed for both hemispheres. Motor function of the affected hand was tested by the Wolf Motor Function and Action Research Arm tests. The evaluations were performed at baseline and weekly over 7  weeks of in-patient neurological rehabilitation.ResultsSevere hand dysfunction was associated with a strong suppression of ipsilesional cortico-spinal excitability and a shift of excitability towards the contralesional hemisphere. Mild hand impairment was associated with a shift of cortico-spinal excitability towards the ipsilesional hemisphere. Favorable motor recovery correlated with an increase of ipsilesional cortico-spinal excitability.
Source: Journal of Neurology - Category: Neurology Source Type: research