Functional MRI shows significant rehabilitation is possible more than 6 months after stroke
Researchers used a hand-operated robotic device and functional
MRI (fMRI) to demonstrate that chronic stroke patients can be effectively rehabilitated
longer than previously thought according to a study presented at the annual meeting
of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA). This is the first study using
fMRI to map the brain in order to track stroke rehabilitation.
"We have shown that the brain has the ability to
regain function through rehabilitative exercises following a stroke," said
A. Aria Tzika, Ph.D., director of the NMR Surgical Laboratory at Massachusetts
General Hospital (MGH) and Shriners Burn Institute and assistant professor in
the Department of Surgery at Harvard Medical School in Boston. "We have learned
that the brain is malleable, even six months or more after a stroke, which is
a longer period of time than previously thought."
Previously, it was believed that there was only a short
window of three to six months following a stroke when rehabilitation could make
an improvement.
"Our research is important because 65 percent of people who have a stroke
affecting hand use are still unable to incorporate the affected hand into their
daily activities after six months," Dr. Tzika said.
To determine if stroke rehabilitation after six months
was possible, the researchers studied five right-hand dominant patients who had
strokes at least six months prior that affected the left side of the brain and,
consequently, use of the right hand.
For the study, the patients squeezed a special MR-compatible
robotic device for an hour a day, three days per week for four weeks. fMRI exams
were performed before, during, upon completion of training and after a non-training
period to assess permanence of rehabilitation. fMRI measures the tiny changes
in blood oxygenation level that occur when a part of the brain is active.
The results showed that rehabilitation using hand training
significantly increased activation in the cortex. Furthermore, the increased cortical
activation persisted in the stroke patients who had exercised during the training
period but then stopped for several months.
"These findings should give hope to people who have
had strokes, their families and the rehabilitative specialists who treat them,"
Dr. Tzika said.
Dr. Tzika is an affiliated member of the Athinoula A.
Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging in the Department of Radiology at MGH,
where the research is ongoing.
Co-authors are Dionyssios Mintzopoulos, Ph.D., Azadeh
Khanicheh, Ph.D., Bruce Rosen, M.D., Ph.D., Loukas Astrakas, Ph.D., and Michael
Moskowitz, M.D.
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