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Journal of Child Neurology, Vol. 20, No. 1, 64-75 (2005)
DOI: 10.1177/08830738050200011101

Residual Motor Control and Cortical Representations of Function Following Hemispherectomy: Effects of Etiology

Stella de Bode, PhD

Department of Neurology, Neurologic Rehabilitation Unit, UCLA School of Medicine, sdebode{at}ucla.edu.

Ann Firestine, MS

Department of Neurology, Neurologic Rehabilitation Unit, UCLA School of Medicine

Gary W. Mathern, MD

Division of Neurosurgery, UCLA Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA

Bruce Dobkin, MD

Department of Neurology, Neurologic Rehabilitation Unit, UCLA School of Medicine

Fifteen posthemispherectomy children were examined to assess residual motor function of the paretic side using the 74-point Fugl-Meyer Assessment of Motor Recovery scale. The degree of residual motor control differed for upper and lower extremities, with hand function being most severely impaired. Posthemispherectomy motor outcomes also differed as a function of etiology: cortical dysplasia, perinatal infarct, and Rasmussen's encephalitis. Children whose intractable seizures resulted from perinatal middle cerebral artery stroke demonstrated the most spared motor function. To detect cortical areas that represented motor control of the hemiparetic side, we focused on voluntary control of the affected lower extremity. Seven of our patients were able to carry out a foot dorsiflexion paradigm during functional magnetic resonance imaging, and these results were compared with activations found in normal controls. All children showed activations in the sensorimotor network ipsilateral to the affected side. The perinatal infarct group demonstrated greater activity in the cingulate cortex, whereas the Rasmussen's encephalitis group had significant activations in the insula, suggesting etiology-specific differences in reorganization. These findings are discussed in the framework of our understanding of mechanisms of cortical plasticity in the injured brain and its relevance to neurologic rehabilitation. We suggest that imaging techniques are important tools in identifying cortical regions underlying functional reorganization. Furthermore, detection of such areas might become a basis for specific training promoting the optimal reorganization of cortical networks to enhance motor control. (J Child Neurol 2005;20:64—75).


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