Stroke Clinical Trial
Official title:
Brain Network Models Of Motor Recovery After Stroke
As with other real=world connected systems, studying the network structure of multiple
interactions in the brain (holism versus reductionism) has profound implications in the
comprehension of emergent complex phenomena like, for example, the capability to functionally
reorganize after cerebrovascular "attacks" or stroke. This dynamic skill, which is known in
neuroscience as brain plasticity, is not only interesting from a network perspective, but it
also plays a crucial role in determining the motor/cognitive recovery of patients who survive
a stroke.
Network analysis of functional connectivity (FC) patterns estimated from neuroimaging
techniques such as electroencephalography (EEG), magnetoencephalography (MEG) and functional
magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has allowed a major breakthrough in the understanding of
physiopathology of stroke from a system perspective. Recent evidence from cross=sectional
studies1,2 highlights that stroke lesions generally induce i) critical deviation from optimal
(i.e. small=world) network topologies supporting both segregated and integrated information
processing, ii) altered inter=hemispheric connectivity and modularity, iii) and abnormal
region centrality in the ipsilesional hemisphere as well as in the contralesional hemisphere.
While these findings provide new descriptors on how stroke lesions affect the functional
brain network organization and how this correlates with the resulting behavioral impairment
(e.g. hemiplegia, aphasia), they only represent a static picture of the brain plasticity,
which is instead intrinsically dynamic, and partially inform on the chances of single
patients to recover their motor/cognitive functions. These aspects dramatically limit the
investigator's ability to fully understand the brain organizational mechanisms after stroke
and to probe the predictive power of possible network=based neuromarkers of recovery. The
ATTACK project aims to overcome these technological and methodological barriers by
implementing the following three=fold strategy:
1. acquiring a longitudinal dataset of brain and behavioral data in stroke patients and
healthy controls,
2. developing new analytic tools to characterize and generate temporally dynamic brain
networks,
3. building network=based models of functional recovery after stroke, accounting for
individual patients.
The major thrust of this project is to develop a fundamentally new technology that overpasses
current views in brain network analysis in an effort to i) identify the organizational
mechanisms of brain plasticity underlying recovery in stroke patients and ii) exploit this
information to design new diagnostic and prognostic neuromarkers of motor recovery.
ATTACK focuses on the acquisition of a longitudinal dataset (15 patients and 15 age=matched
healthy controls). Multimodal data (clinical/functional scales, behavioral measures, brain
activity EEG) will be collected from each patient at different phases after stroke across a
series of consecutive recording sessions, i.e. +10 days, +1 month, +3 months, +6 months, +12
months after the first stroke event
Patients will be selected with the following inclusion criteria: first=ever infarct lesion,
with hand motor impairment. Exclusion criteria will be aged 18 to 85 years, inability to
understand the task or perform motor tasks, contraindication to MRI. In each session,
patients will be asked to perform several trials of resting state and hand grasping tasks
(imagery and execution) in order to study also the intra=session brain changes occurring at
short=time scales. Differently from current approaches focusing on fMRI changes, the present
project focuses on high= density (64 sensors) EEG data in order to exploit the higher
temporal resolution (in the order of ms) and have a much clearer understanding of the motor
processes occurring at rapid oscillatory ranges (e.g. ERD/ERS). Furthermore, the high
portability of EEG systems has the advantage to perform recording sessions at the patient's
bedside, or even at home, in a totally non=invasive way, thus decreasing the impact on
patient life in the hospital.
Clinical and behavioral data will be also collected from each patient to assess their motor
recovery progress. Different scores include the ARAT, hand grip strength, NIHSS with motor
subitems and Rankin score. Finally, anatomical MRI (T1 and tensor imaging) scan will be
acquired for each patient after the subacute phase (+3 months) in order to locate and assess
the severity/size of the lesion. These scores and data will be eventually used as covariates
for the brain network topological changes. The first recording session will be performed at
the Stroke unit of the Hospital Pitié_Salpêtrière. Subsequent sessions will be performed at
the ICM, operated by the Centre EEG/MEG (CENIR).
The same data will be also collected at the ICM from the group of age-matched healthy
subjects according to the same protocols and timing. This data are crucial in that they will
be used to assess the statistical significance of the changes observed in the stroke
patients. Recording sessions will be conducted in compliance with French regulations,
including provisions relating to biomedical research in the Public Health Code, the French
Bioethics law, the French Data Protection Act, and the World Medical Association Declaration
of Helsinki.
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