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Crossed Cerebellar Atrophy in Perinatal Stroke
Author(s) -
Brandon T. Craig,
Cheyanne Olsen,
Sarah M. Mah,
Helen L. Carlson,
XingChang Wei,
Adam Kirton
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
stroke
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.397
H-Index - 319
eISSN - 1524-4628
pISSN - 0039-2499
DOI - 10.1161/strokeaha.118.022423
Subject(s) - medicine , cerebellum , stroke (engine) , cerebral palsy , brain size , magnetic resonance imaging , atrophy , cognition , pediatrics , physical medicine and rehabilitation , cardiology , psychiatry , radiology , mechanical engineering , engineering
Background and Purpose— Perinatal stroke causes most hemiparetic cerebral palsy and lifelong disability. Crossed cerebellar atrophy (CCA) is chronic cerebellar volume loss following contralateral motor pathway injury. We hypothesized that CCA is quantifiable in perinatal stroke and associated with poor motor outcome. Methods— Term-born children with perinatal stroke, magnetic resonance imaging beyond 6 months of age, and no additional neurological disorders were recruited. Blinded scorers measured cerebellar volumes expressed as ratios (contralesional/ipsilesional), with values <1 suggesting CCA. Motor outcomes including perinatal stroke outcome measure (PSOM) motor and cognitive scores (good/poor), Assisting Hand Assessment, and Melbourne Assessment were compared with cerebellar volume measures. Results— Seventy-three children met criteria (53% male). Mean cerebellar ratios were <1.0 (0.975±0.04; range, 0.885–1.079;P <0.001) suggesting occurrence of CCA. Cerebellar ratios did not differ between stroke types or across PSOM motor outcomes. Larger ipsilesional cerebellar volume was associated with poor PSOM cognitive outcome (P =0.042), possibly with poor PSOM motor outcome (P =0.063), and overall PSOM score (P =0.034).Conclusions— CCA occurs in perinatal stroke but is not strongly associated with motor outcome. However, ipsilesional cerebellar volume is associated with poor cognitive and overall outcomes.

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