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Activation of Brain Sensorimotor Network by Somatosensory Input in Patients with Hemiparetic Stroke: A Functional MRI Study

Written By

Hiroyuki Kato and Masahiro Izumiyama

Submitted: 02 April 2012 Published: 09 January 2013

DOI: 10.5772/51693

From the Edited Volume

Novel Frontiers of Advanced Neuroimaging

Edited by Kostas N. Fountas

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1. Introduction

Stroke is one of the leading causes of disability in the elderly in many countries. Residual motor impairment, especially hemiparesis, is one of the most common sequelae after stroke. Motor recovery after stroke exhibits a wide range of difference among patients, and is dependent on the location and amount of brain damage, degree of impairment, and nature of deficit (Duncan et al., 1992). Full recovery of motor function is often observed when initial impairment is mild, but recovery is limited when there were severe deficits at stroke onset. The motor recovery after stroke may be caused by the effects of medical therapy against acute stroke, producing a resolution of brain edema and an increase in cerebral blood flow in the penumbra and remote areas displaying diaschisis. However, functional improvements may be seen past the period of acute tissue response and its resolution. The role of rehabilitation in facilitating motor recovery is considered to be produced by promoting brain plasticity.

Non-invasive neuroimaging techniques, including functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and positron emission tomography (PET), enable us to measure task-related brain activity with excellent spatial resolution (Herholz & Heiss, 2000; Calautti & Baron, 2003; Rossini et al., 2003). The functional neuroimaging studies usually employ active motor tasks, such as hand grip and finger tapping, and require that the patients are able to move their hand. Neuroimaging studies in stroke patients have reported considerable amounts of data that suggest the mechanisms of motor functional recovery after stroke. Initial cross-sectional studies at chronic stages of stroke have demonstrated that the pattern of brain activation is different between paretic and normal hand movements, and suggested that long-term recovery is facilitated by compensation, recruitment and reorganization of cortical motor function in both damaged and non-damaged hemispheres (Chollet et al., 1991; Weiller et al., 1992; Cramer et al., 1997; Cao et al., 1998; Ward et al., 2003a). Subsequent longitudinal studies from subacute to chronic stages (before and after rehabilitation) have revealed a dynamic, bihemispheric reorganization of motor network, and emphasized the necessity of successive studies (Marshall et al., 2000; Calautti et al., 2001; Feydy et al., 2002; Ward et al, 2003b).

When the stroke patients are unable to move their hand, alternative paradigms are necessary to study their brain function. Passive, instead of active, hand movement has been employed for this purpose, and increases in brain activities are found not only in sensory but also motor cortices (Nelles et al., 1999; Loubinoux et al., 2003; Tombari et al., 2004). Functional neuroimaging studies suggest that a change in processing of somatosensory information in the sensorimotor cortex may play an important role in motor recovery after stroke (Schaechter et al., 2006).

Most significant recovery of motor function takes place within the first weeks after stroke and an early introduction of rehabilitation is crucial for a good outcome. Rehabilitation at the early stages of stroke uses physiotherapy, such as massage and passive movement of the paretic hand, as an initial step of rehabilitation, especially in patients with severe motor impairment. However, it is difficult to assess the effects of physiotherapy in patients with severe impairment early after stroke. In this fMRI study, we investigated the effects of somatosensory input on the activity of brain sensorimotor network in stroke patients. Since somatosensory feedback is essential for the exact execution of hand movement, the result can provide a scientific basis for the establishment of rehabilitation strategies.

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2. Materials and methods

2.1. Subjects

We selected 6 stroke patients with pure motor hemiparesis (4 men and 2 women, 63-85 years old). Three of them received fMRI during a task of unilateral palm brushing (stimulation of tactile sensation using a plastic hairbrush at approximately 1 Hz), and three other patients received fMRI during a task of unilateral passive hand movement (stimulation of proprioceptive sensation by passive flexion-extension of fingers at approximately 1 Hz). The fMRI studies were performed 5 days to 2 months after stroke onset.

The patients presented with neurological deficits including moderate to severe hemiparesis, and were admitted to our hospital. They received standard medical therapy for stroke and rehabilitation. All of them were right-handed. All the cerebral infarcts were evidenced by MRI, and were located in various regions of the cerebrum. They could hardly move their hands when the fMRI was performed. Clinical data are summarized in Table 1. Three right-handed, normal subjects (59-68 years of age; 2 men and 1 woman) served as controls for a comparison to show normal brain activation during a unilateral hand grip task. This study was approved by the ethics committee of our hospital and informed consent was obtained from all subjects in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki.

Age
Sex
H
Stroke
location
PMH
day
fMRI activation
Palm brushing
168MLR corona
radiata
HT
DM
28
N: L S1M1, L SMA, R Cbll
P: R S1M1, R SMA
275MLR internal
capsule
DM
39
N: L S1M1, L SMA
P: R S1M1, R SMA, Blt IPC
363FRL corona
radiata
HT
DM
HL
5

N: R S1M1
P: L S1M1, Blt SPC, R IPC
Passive movement
485FLR internal
capsule
HT
HL
72
N: L S1M1
P: R S1M1
579MRL MCA
cortex
HT
HL
af
13

N: L S1M1, R Cbll
P: R S1M1
676MLR ponsDM
HT
21
N: L S1M1, L SMA, R Cbll
P: R S1M1

Table 1.

Patient characteristics

2.2. Functional MRI

The fMRI studies were performed using a 1.5 T Siemens Magnetom Symphony MRI scanner as described previously (Kato et al., 2002). Briefly, blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) images were obtained continuously in a transverse orientation using a gradient-echo, single shot echo planar imaging pulse sequence. The acquisition parameters were as follows: repetition time 3 s, time of echo 50 ms, flip angle 90°, 3-mm slice thickness, 30 slices through the entire brain, field of view 192 x 192 mm, and 128 x 128 matrix. During the fMRI scan, the patients and normal controls received or performed a task as mentioned above. This task performance occurred in periods of 30 s, interspaced with 30 s rest periods. The cycle of rest and task was repeated 5 times during each hand study. Therefore, the fMRI scan of each hand study took 5 min to complete, producing 3,000 images. A staff member monitored the patient directly throughout the study, and gave the sensory stimulations or the start and stop signals of hand grip by tapping gently on the knee.

Data analysis was performed using Statistical Parametric Mapping (SPM) 2 (Wellcome Department of Cognitive Neurology, London, UK, http://www.fil.ion.ucl.ac.uk/spm/) implemented in MATLAB (The MathWorks Inc., Natick, MA, USA). After realignment and smoothing, the general linear model was employed for the detection of activated voxels. The voxels were considered as significantly activated if p<0.05 using the FWE analysis. All the measurements were performed with this same statistical threshold. The activation images were overlaid on corresponding T1-weighted anatomic images.

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3. Results

Both tactile and proprioceptive inputs via the unaffected hand activated contralateral primary sensorimotor cortex (S1M1) in all the patients, and the supplementary motor areas (SMA) and the ipsilateral cerebellum in part of the patients (Table, Figs. 1 & 2). This activation pattern is similar to that activated during active hand movement (Fig. 3), although the activation was less extensive. Both tactile and proprioceptive inputs via the paretic hand also activated the contralateral S1M1 in all the patients, and in SMA and superior and inferior parietal cortices in part of the patients (Table, Figs. 1 & 2), although to a lesser extent as compared with unaffected hand. No cerebellar activation was observed when paretic hand was stimulated.

Figure 1.

fMRI of a 68-year old man (patient 1) who had a cerebral infarct in the right corona radiata (arrow in a, diffusion-weighted MRI). After 28 days of stroke onset, palm brushing of the right (unaffected) hand (b-d) induced activation in the left primary sensorimotor cortex (1), the supplementary motor area (2), and right cerebellum (3). During palm brushing of the left (paretic) hand (e-g), activation in contralateral primary sensorimotor cortex (1) was seen, although less extensive, and no activation was seen in the supplementary motor areas and the cerebellum.

Figure 2.

fMRI of a 79-year old man (patient 5) who had a cerebral infarct in part of the right middle cerebral artery territory (arrow in a, diffusion-weighted MRI). After 13 days of stroke onset, passive movement of the left (unaffected) hand (e-g) induced activation in the right primary sensorimotor cortex (1) and left cerebellum (3). During passive movement of the right (paretic) hand (b-d), activation in contralateral primary sensorimotor cortex (1) was observed.

Figure 3.

fMRI of a 61-year old man (control). Active right hand movement (a-c) induced a normal activation pattern in the left primary sensorimotor cortex (1), supplementary motor areas (2) and right cerebellum (3).

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4. Discussion

4.1. Activation of sensorimotor network by somatosensory input

The results demonstrated that somatosensory stimulation of the unaffected hand, both tactile and proprioceptive input, activated sensorimotor network in the brain, and that the activation pattern was similar to that induced by active hand movement. Somatosensory input to the paretic hand also activated the sensorimotor network in the brain, although to a lesser degree. Of importance was that the activation involved not only postcentral S1 but also precentral M1, as observed in previous reports employing somatosensory stimulation as a task.

Passive movement studies have shown that brain activation during passive movement is seen in regions such as the contralateral sensorimotor cortex, the bilateral premotor cortex, supplementary motor areas, and inferior parietal cortex (Nelles et al., 1999; Loubinoux et al., 2003; Tombari et al., 2004). The similarity of activation patterns between passive and active hand movements highlights the contribution of afferent synaptic activity for central motor control, and suggests that the sensory systems play an important role in central motor control. Additional explanation may be that the repetitive sensory input induces motor imagery in the patients. Imagery of movement activates largely the same brain areas that are activated when movements are actually executed (Decety, 1996; Grezes & Decety 2001).

The brain activation during paretic hand sensory stimulation in this study was reduced as compared to that during unaffected hand sensory stimulation. This reduction may reflect the sensorimotor network damage caused by stroke, although the fMRI BOLD response could be reduced in the cerebral hemisphere of the lesion side (Murata et al., 2006; Mazzetto-Betti et al., 2010). Nevertheless, the result confirms the possibility of inducing sensorimotor transformations even in severely impaired stroke patients.

The observation of S1 and M1 activation during sensory input as well as active movement suggests that the sensorimotor network is functionally connected with each other. Actually, human motor and sensory hand cortices overlap, and are not divided in a simple manner by the central sulcus (McGlone et al., 2002; Morre et al.; 2000; Nii et al., 1996). Furthermore, S1 and M1 are heavily interconnected (Jones et al., 1978) and both are the sites of origin of pyramidal tract neurons in the monkey (Fromm & Evarts, 1982). Proprioceptive afferents from the muscle spindles (fibers IA, II), along with the projections from other articular and cutaneous receptors (fibers I to IV), gain access not only to S1 but also to M1 in the monkey (Lemon, 1999; Lemon & Porter, 1976).

Previous studies have also demonstrated the activation of secondary sensorimotor areas induced by passive hand movements, as seen in our study. SMA has rich anatomical connections with many areas in the central nervous system, such as thalamus, dorsal premotor cortex (PMd), spinal cord, and contralateral hemisphere (Juergens, 1984; Rouiller et al.,1994; Dum & Strick, 1996; Dum & Strick, 2005), and may be an important source of descending commands for the generation and control of distal movements in the monkey(He et al., 1995). SMA is also involved in motor learning in man (Halsband & Lange, 2006). Therefore, SMA has been suggested to play a crucial role in the early processes of recovery after lesions of primary motor pathways (Loubinoux et al., 2003).

Ventral premotor cortex (PMv) receives strong projections from S1 (Stepniewska et al., 2006), and PMv neurons project onto cervical and thoracic motoneurons in the monkey (He et al., 1993; Rouiller et al., 1994). The PMv corticospinal neurons supply part of the hand function after M1 lesion in the monkey (Liu & Rouiller, 1999). Nudo and colleagues demonstrated rewiring from M1 to PMv after ischemic brain injury, with substantial enlargements of the hand representation in the remote PMv that are proportional to the amount of hand representation destroyed in M1(Frost et al., 2003; Dancause et al., 2005). Nelles et al. (2001) pointed out the crucial role of a network including the lower part of BA40 and PMv, bilaterally, in task-oriented passive training aimed at improving motor recovery in severely impaired stroke patients. These areas could also be crucial for promoting reorganization in the rest of the brain.

4.2. Activation of sensorimotor network by active motor task

Previous functional neuroimaging studies on poststroke cerebral reorganization from acute to chronic stages revealed several activation patterns during active paretic hand movement (Ward & Cohen, 2004; Jang, 2007; Kato & Izumiyama, 2010). These include (1) a posterior shift of contralateral S1M1 activation (Pineiro et al., 2001; Calautti et al., 2003), (2) peri-infarct reorganization after infarction involving M1 (Cramer et al., 1997; Jang et al., 2005a), (3) a shift of M1 activation to the ipsilateral (contralesional) cortex (Chollet et al., 1991; Marshall et al., 2000; Feydy et al., 2002), (4) contribution of the secondary motor areas (Cramer et al., 1997; Carey et al., 2002; Ward et al., 2006), and (5) higher contralateral activity in the cerebellar hemisphere (Small et al., 2002).

These studies have also shown that the expanded activations may later decrease with functional improvements, indicating that best recovery is obtained when there is restitution of activation toward the physiological network over time. The contralesional shift of activation may return to ipsilesional S1M1 activation with functional gains (Feydy et al., 2002; Takeda et al., 2007), but worse outcome may correlate with a shift in the balance of activation toward the contralesional S1M1 (Calautti et al., 2001; Feydy et al., 2002; Zemke et al., 2003). Thus, the patterns of cerebral activation evoked by active hand movement show impaired organization and reorganization of brain sensorimotor network, and best recovery may depend on how much original motor system is reusable. The patterns of activation may also be dependent on the patient’s ability to recruit residual portions of the bilateral motor network (Silvestrini et al., 1998).

Early involvement of secondary sensorimotor areas after M1 lesion may temporarily substitute for the original sensorimotor network involving M1. This step may be a prerequisite to M1 functional reconnection through indirect pathways and to its efficacy in processing motor signals. The previous data suggest that different motor areas operate in parallel rather than in a hierarchical manner, and they are able to substitute for each other (Traversa et al., 1997; Loubinoux et al., 2003). Thus, remodeling of activation within a pre-existing network may be an important process for recovery.

4.3. Implication of somatosensory input as a rehabilitation strategy

There is consensus on the efficacy of physiotherapy. Active training is more efficient than passive training, but active training cannot be applied to very impaired patients. We need to consider other approaches for patients who cannot move the paretic limbs at the early phase of recovery. Physiotherapists apply sensory stimulation and passive movement daily to acute stroke patients and only these approaches are possible when the patients have complete paralysis. A few studies have validated the efficacy of sensory or proprioceptive stimulation on motor recovery.

Carel et al. (2000) have shown that proprioceptive training induces a reorganization of sensorimotor representation in healthy subjects, and that the anatomical substrates are SMA and S1M1 contralateral to the stimulation. Subsequently, Dechaumont-Palacin et al. (2008) showed that paretic wrist proprioceptive training produced change in SMA, premotor cortex, and a contralesional network including inferior parietal cortex (lower part of BA 40), secondary sensory cortex, and PMv. Thus, increased contralateral activity in secondary sensorimotor areas may facilitate control of recovered motor function by simple proprioceptive integration in severely impaired patients. Brain activation during passive movement increase with time after stroke(Nelles et al., 1999; Loubinoux et al., 2003; Tombari et al., 2004). Nelles et al. (2001) tested a mixed, task-oriented rehabilitative program that is at first passive, then active as recovery permits, and observed hyperactivation of the bilateral low parietal cortex and premotor cortex and a smaller hyperactivation of the ipsilateral M1.Thus, the changes might represent increased processing of sensory information relevant to motor output.

Somatosensory input to the motor cortex, via corticocortical connections with the somatosensory cortex, is important for learning new motor skills (Sakamoto et al., 1989; Pavlides et al., 1993; Vidoni et al., 2010). Somatosensory input may also play a critical role in motor relearning after hemiparetic stroke (Dechaumont-Palacin et al., 2008; Conforto at al. 2007; Vidoni et al., 2009). Schaechter et al. (2012) showed that increased responsiveness of the ipsilesional S1M1 to tactile stimulation over the subacute posrstroke period correlated with concurrent motor recovery and predicted motor recovery experienced over the year. This finding suggests that a strong link between change in processing of somatosensory information in the S1M1 during the early poststroke period and motor recovery in hemiparetic patients.

Muscular and peripheral nerve electrical stimulation increases motor output after stroke (Conforto et al., 2002; Kimberley et al., 2004; Wu et al., 2006; Conforto et al., 2010). Peripheral nerve stimulation increases corticomotoneuronal excitability (Kaelin-Lang et al., 2002; Ridding et al., 2000), and activation of S1M1 and PMd in healthy subjects (Wu et al., 2005). If applied to paretic hand of stroke patients paired with motor training, electrical nerve stimulation may enhance training effects on corticomotoneuronal plasticity in stroke patients (Sawaki et al, 2006; Yozbatiran et al., 2006; Celnik et al., 2007).

Thus, increased activity in brain sensorimotor network by somatosensory input may facilitate control of recovered motor function by operating not only at a high-order processing level but also at a low level of simple sensory integration. Therefore, early post-stroke fMRI studies using sensory stimulation as a task may be of great clinically importance and somatosensory stimulation over the poststroke recovery period may form a basis for improving motor recovery in stroke patients.

Another merit of massage or touch therapy may be the psychological effects produced by tactile stimulation, such as relaxation, alleviation of anxiety and depression. These effects may be evoked by stimulation of dopamine and serotonin secretion since increased levels of dopamine and serotonin have been shown in the urine following tactile skin stimulation (Field et al., 2005). Tactile stimulation in the rat evokes an increased dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens of the brain, which is thought to play a key role in motivational and reward processes (Maruyaka et al.; 2012). Relieving anxiety and depression seems important in the early steps of rehabilitation for patients with acute stroke.

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5. Conclusion

The findings of this study demonstrate that the somatosensory inputs via the normal hand can activate brain sensorimotor network to a comparable extent with the areas that are activated during active hand movement, and that the somatosensory inputs via the paretic hand at the early stages of stroke before clinical motor recovery can also induce activities to some of the brain sensorimotor network. The result suggests that physiotherapy that employs somatosensory input via the paretic hand may be used as a first step to activate rehabilitation-dependent changes in the motor network in the brain toward restoration of motor function.The result may provide new insight into the establishment of rehabilitation strategiesafter stroke.

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Acknowledgement

We thank the staff members of the MRI section of Sendai Nakae Hospital, Ms. Fumi Kozuka, Ms. Satsuki Ohi, Mr. Takeru Ohmukai, Ms. Yoko Sato, Ms. Aya Kanai, and Mr. Katsuhiro Aki, for their help to perform fMRI studies. We also thank Dr. Naohiro Saito, Department of Physiology, Tohoku University School of Medicine, Sendai, Japan, for his expert assistance on the fMRI-spm analysis. This study was supported by Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (22500473), Japan Society for the Promotion of Science.

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Written By

Hiroyuki Kato and Masahiro Izumiyama

Submitted: 02 April 2012 Published: 09 January 2013