# Multimodal Neuroimaging: Advanced Tracking of Longitudinal Aphasia Recovery

> **NIH VA IK2** · VETERANS HEALTH ADMINISTRATION · 2023 · —

## Abstract

The first few months of post-stroke recovery is a critical time period where spontaneous changes in language
functions and underlying neural processes are observed. Imaging brain changes during this time may help
clinicians identify the recovery of neural processes, but must be done in a way that is not confounded by stroke-
induced cerebrovascular changes. This is important, as evidence suggests that cerebrovascular insult will elicit
a cascade of changes that leads to vascular remodeling in the first few months of post-stroke recovery. This
CDA2 proposal addresses this gap through development of a set of integrated multi-modal neuroimaging
methodologies to dissociate neural and vascular changes during recovery of language functions from early sub-
acute (2-6 weeks post-stroke) to late sub-acute phase (12-16 weeks post-stroke) in patients with aphasia.
In the first aim, we will determine if regressing out the vascular signals (CVR and CBF) from task Blood Oxygen
Level Dependent (BOLD) functional MRI (fMRI) activity at each time point (early and late phase) will improve
the relationship between change in task-BOLD activity and change in lexical decision behavior. Our approach
will be to track task-BOLD fMRI activity from early to late sub-acute phase while the patients participate in an
auditory word recognition task (lexical decision) in both phases. We will apply our sensitization scheme for
regressing out vascular signals. The change in BOLD amplitude (from sensitized and unsensitized/standard
task BOLD fMRI activity) will then be related to changes in the lexical decision behavior. We expect to see that
the neuro-sensitized task BOLD fMRI activity will have a stronger correlation with lexical decision measures
than the unsensitized/standard BOLD fMRI signal. In the second aim, we will determine if removing the
vascular signals from resting state BOLD (rs-BOLD) acquired from residual language network at each time
point (early and late phase) will improve the relationship between change in rs-BOLD network measures and
change in language (domain specific and domain general) measures. Our approach will be to acquire rs-BOLD
fMRI scans during the early and late sub-acute phase in patients with aphasia. We will then carry out a whole
brain voxel-wise network analysis (i.e. modularity) choosing apriori seed ROI from the residual language-
related brain areas. To sensitize the rs-BOLD fMRI signals to neural connections, we will carry out the same
sensitization scheme (as described in Aim 1) at a voxel level. We will then identify changes in language network
measures (from sensitized and unsensitized/standard rs-BOLD fMRI) and correlate them with language
behavior (domain specific and domain general). After completing Aim 2, it is our expectation that the proposed
sensitization scheme enhances the sensitivity of rs-BOLD network measures to brain network reorganization in
language specific and language-nonspecific cognitive domains. In the third aim, w...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10574497
- **Project number:** 5IK2RX002934-05
- **Recipient organization:** VETERANS HEALTH ADMINISTRATION
- **Principal Investigator:** Venkatagiri Krishnamurthy
- **Activity code:** IK2 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** VA
- **Fiscal year:** 2023
- **Award amount:** —
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2019-04-01 → 2025-03-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10574497

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10574497, Multimodal Neuroimaging: Advanced Tracking of Longitudinal Aphasia Recovery (5IK2RX002934-05). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-25 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10574497. Licensed CC0.

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