Journal article

Observational Study of Neuroimaging Biomarkers of Severe Upper Limb Impairment After Stroke

KS Hayward, JK Ferris, KR Lohse, MR Borich, A Borstad, JM Cassidy, SC Cramer, SP Dukelow, SE Findlater, RL Hawe, SL Liew, JL Neva, JC Stewart, LA Boyd

Neurology | LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS | Published : 2022

Abstract

Background and ObjectivesIt is difficult to predict poststroke outcome for individuals with severe motor impairment because both clinical tests and corticospinal tract (CST) microstructure may not reliably indicate severe motor impairment. Here, we test whether imaging biomarkers beyond the CST relate to severe upper limb (UL) impairment poststroke by evaluating white matter microstructure in the corpus callosum (CC). In an international, multisite hypothesis-generating observational study, we determined if (1) CST asymmetry index (CST-AI) can differentiate between individuals with mild-moderate and severe UL impairment and (2) CC biomarkers relate to UL impairment within individuals with se..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by State Government of Victoria


Funding Acknowledgements

M.R. Borich: NIH K12 HD055931. A. Borstad: AHAScientist Development Grant-PI Lynne Gauthier, ALB Co-I. L.A. Boyd: CIHR MOP-106651; Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada/Centre for Stroke Recovery. J.C. Stewart: NIH R03 HD087481 and American Heart Association 15SDG24970011. J. M. Cassidy: NIH R00 HD091375, T32 AR047752-11A1. S.C. Cramer: NIH grants: K24 HD074722, R01 NS059909. S. Dukelow: CIHR MOP106662. K.S. Hayward: NHMRC 1088449, MSFHR 11590. S.L. Liew: NIH grants: R01 NR105591, K01 HD091283.