Brain Health and Aphasia Recovery

NIH RePORTER · NIH · P50 · $174,292 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Abstract Language impairments can vary considerably between individuals with aphasia. Our neurobiological models based on the stroke lesion can only partly explain the aphasic symptoms. We hypothesize that the integrity of the residual brain tissue outside the stroke lesion is an important, but not yet fully appreciated, determinant of aphasia severity and recovery. It is well recognized that cardiovascular risk factors lead to cumulative widespread brain damage through small vessel disease (SVD). Outside the aphasia literature, SVD has been strongly associated with poor cognitive reserve and reduced resiliency to various forms of neurological injury. Stroke survivors with aphasia typically have cardiovascular risk factors and they commonly exhibit SVD. However, the impact of SVD is not usually taken into account in our models of recovery, even though the residual brain tissue is responsible for overcoming the loss of function. It follows that higher degrees of SVD outside the lesion may lead to worse aphasic symptoms and less chances of recovery due to reduced capacity to compensate for the stroke injury. Our goal is to directly test this hypothesis. We propose to evaluate how aphasia is shaped by the stroke lesion in combination with residual brain integrity. Neuroimaging (brain MRI) is ideally suited to address this problem. SVD is composed of microangiopathic ischemic changes and microhemorrhages. The ischemic changes from SVD can be measured through white matter hyper intensities using T2-weighted and T2-FLAIR images, and the microhemorrhages can be assessed using susceptibility-weighted images. SVD preferentially affects white matter and diffusion MRI can provide additional measures of white matter microstructural integrity and their relationship with the whole brain neuronal networks architecture (the brain connectome). Using our experience with post-stroke lesion symptom mapping, white matter and connectome imaging we propose a comprehensive study of the neurobiology and impact of SVD in aphasia. Our project will build on international guidelines for SVD assessment (The STandards for ReportIng Vascular changes on nEuroimaging - STRIVE) and it will develop an innovative multimodal machine learning approach to fully assess brain integrity. Brain integrity and language measures will be assessed in the context of chronic (Project 1) and acute (Project 2) aphasia recovery. The behavioral and linguistic assessments will be guided by Project 4. With the neuroimaging core, we will develop and distribute a multimodal neuroimaging approach to quantify the severity and location of SVD. Specific Aim 1 will longitudinally assess the independent impact of SVD, controlling for the brain lesion, on acute and chronic symptoms, as well as acute and chronic language recovery. Specific Aim 2 will evaluate the mechanisms by which SVD leads to language impairments by assessing the impact of SVD and stroke lesions on connectome neural network architecture...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10094381
Project number
2P50DC014664-06A1
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA AT COLUMBIA
Principal Investigator
Leonardo F Bonilha
Activity code
P50
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2021
Award amount
$174,292
Award type
2
Project period
2016-04-01 → 2026-03-31