Lesion Localization of Poststroke Lateropulsion

Suzanne R. Babyar, Anna Smeragliuolo, Fatimah M. Albazron, David Putrino, Michael Reding, Aaron D. Boes

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

29 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background and Purpose - Hemispheric stroke studies associating lateropulsion (pusher syndrome) with the location of brain lesions have had mixed results from small, unmatched samples. This study was designed to determine whether lateropulsion localizes to specific brain regions across patients with stroke using a case-control design. Methods - Fifty patients with lateropulsion after stroke were matched with 50 stroke patients without lateropulsion using age, time since onset of stroke, admission motor Functional Independence Measure score, lesion side, and gender. The primary analysis included multivariate lesion symptom mapping using sparse canonical correlations to identify regions most associated with lateropulsion as assessed with the Burke Lateropulsion Scale. Secondary analyses included evaluating paired comparisons for lesion volume, degree of motor impairment, motor and cognitive Functional Independence Measure scores. Results - The lesion symptom mapping analysis of all lesions mapped onto a common hemisphere produced an overall significant model (P<5×10-5) with a regional peak at the inferior parietal lobe at the junction of the post-central gyrus (Brodmann Area 2) and Brodmann Area 40 as the lesion location most associated with lateropulsion. Lesion volume was larger for patients with lateropulsion. Despite adequate matching, motor performance and total Functional Independence Measure scores differed at a group level between patients with and without lateropulsion. Conclusions - This analysis implicated lesion involvement of the inferior parietal lobe as a key neuroanatomical determinant of developing lateropulsion. A better understanding of the anatomic underpinnings of lateropulsion may improve rehabilitation efforts, including the potential for informing noninvasive neuromodulation approaches.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1067-1073
Number of pages7
JournalStroke
Volume50
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 May 2019

Keywords

  • anatomy
  • diagnostic imaging
  • parietal lobe
  • postural balance
  • rehabilitation
  • stroke

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