Publications by authors named "A Stockert"

A new functional deficit caused by a stroke can be understood as a situation of uncertainty that has to prompt deficit discovery and subsequent incorporation into an altered self-perception. Anosognosia for visual field deficits is frequent after stroke. For hemiplegia, patients' performance in a riddle test provided evidence that the inability to generate and adjust beliefs in face of uncertainty contributes to anosognosia for hemiplegia.

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Article Synopsis
  • Damage to white matter tracts, particularly the frontal aslant tract (FAT), can lead to significant neurological issues post-brain tumor surgery, affecting functions like speech and movement.
  • In a study with 15 right-handed patients who had left hemispheric tumors, researchers conducted FAT tractography before and after surgery to evaluate neurological performance and aphasia scores.
  • The findings revealed that the preoperative integrity of the left FAT predicted pre-surgery aphasia scores, while postoperative evaluations of the same tract were significant indicators of expected aphasia outcomes three months later.
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Introduction: Post-stroke depressive symptoms (PSDS) are common and relevant for patient outcome, but their complex pathophysiology is ill understood. It likely involves social, psychological and biological factors. Lesion location is a readily available information in stroke patients, but it is unclear if the neurobiological substrates of PSDS are spatially localized.

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Perfusion CT is established to aid selection of patients with proximal intracranial vessel occlusion for thrombectomy in the extended time window. Selection is mostly based on simple thresholding of perfusion parameter maps, which, however, does not exploit the full information hidden in the high-dimensional perfusion data. We implemented a multiparametric mass-univariate logistic model to predict tissue outcome based on data from 405 stroke patients with acute proximal vessel occlusion in the anterior circulation who underwent mechanical thrombectomy.

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Background And Objective: Theories assume that thalamic stroke may cause aphasia because of dysfunction in connected cortical networks. This takes into account that brain functions are organized in distributed networks, and in turn, localized damage may result in a network disorder such as thalamic aphasia. With this study, we investigate whether the integration of the thalamus into specific thalamocortical networks underlies symptoms after thalamic stroke.

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