White matter volume loss drives cortical reshaping after thalamic infarcts.

Neuroimage Clin

Department of Neurology, University Hospital, LMU Munich, Germany; German Centre for Vertigo and Balance Disorders (DSGZ), University Hospital, LMU Munich, Germany; Munich Centre of Neuroscience, Munich, Germany; Munich Cluster for Systems Neurology (SyNergy), Munich, Germany.

Published: March 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study looked at patients who had a specific kind of brain injury that affected their ability to sense where they are and move their eyes properly.
  • Researchers found that some patients had problems with double vision and feeling dizzy, while others faced different issues without dizziness.
  • Over time, some symptoms improved but certain sensations remained affected, and the brain showed changes in structure related to the injury.

Article Abstract

Objective: The integration of somatosensory, ocular motor and vestibular signals is necessary for self-location in space and goal-directed action. We aimed to detect remote changes in the cerebral cortex after thalamic infarcts to reveal the thalamo-cortical connections necessary for multisensory processing and ocular motor control.

Methods: Thirteen patients with unilateral ischemic thalamic infarcts presenting with vestibular, somatosensory, and ocular motor symptoms were examined longitudinally in the acute phase and after six months. Voxel- and surface-based morphometry were used to detect changes in vestibular and multisensory cortical areas and known hubs of central ocular motor processing. The results were compared with functional connectivity data in 50 healthy volunteers.

Results: Patients with paramedian infarcts showed impaired saccades and vestibular perception, i.e., tilts of the subjective visual vertical (SVV). The most common complaint in these patients was double vision or vertigo / dizziness. Posterolateral thalamic infarcts led to tilts of the SVV and somatosensory deficits without vertigo. Tilts of the SVV were higher in paramedian compared to posterolateral infarcts (median 11.2° vs 3.8°). Vestibular and ocular motor symptoms recovered within six months. Somatosensory deficits persisted. Structural longitudinal imaging showed significant volume reduction in subcortical structures connected to the infarcted thalamic nuclei (vestibular nuclei region, dentate nucleus region, trigeminal root entry zone, medial lemniscus, superior colliculi). Volume loss was evident in connections to the frontal, parietal and cingulate lobes. Changes were larger in the ipsilesional hemisphere but were also detected in homotopical regions contralesionally. The white matter volume reduction led to deformation of the cortical projection zones of the infarcted nuclei.

Conclusions: White matter volume loss after thalamic infarcts reflects sensory input from the brainstem as well the cortical projections of the main affected nuclei for sensory and ocular motor processing. Changes in the cortical geometry seem not to reflect gray matter atrophy but rather reshaping of the cortical surface due to the underlying white matter atrophy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8844789PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2022.102953DOI Listing

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