Frontiers in Neurology (Feb 2019)

Cortico-Muscular Coherence Is Reduced Acutely Post-stroke and Increases Bilaterally During Motor Recovery: A Pilot Study

  • Richard Krauth,
  • Johanna Schwertner,
  • Susanne Vogt,
  • Sabine Lindquist,
  • Michael Sailer,
  • Michael Sailer,
  • Almut Sickert,
  • Juliane Lamprecht,
  • Serafeim Perdikis,
  • Serafeim Perdikis,
  • Tiffany Corbet,
  • José del R. Millán,
  • Hermann Hinrichs,
  • Hermann Hinrichs,
  • Hermann Hinrichs,
  • Hans-Jochen Heinze,
  • Hans-Jochen Heinze,
  • Hans-Jochen Heinze,
  • Catherine M. Sweeney-Reed

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2019.00126
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Motor recovery following stroke is believed to necessitate alteration in functional connectivity between cortex and muscle. Cortico-muscular coherence has been proposed as a potential biomarker for post-stroke motor deficits, enabling a quantification of recovery, as well as potentially indicating the regions of cortex involved in recovery of function. We recorded simultaneous EEG and EMG during wrist extension from healthy participants and patients following ischaemic stroke, evaluating function at three time points post-stroke. EEG–EMG coherence increased over time, as wrist mobility recovered clinically, and by the final evaluation, coherence was higher in the patient group than in the healthy controls. Moreover, the cortical distribution differed between the groups, with coherence involving larger and more bilaterally scattered areas of cortex in the patients than in the healthy participants. The findings suggest that EEG–EMG coherence has the potential to serve as a biomarker for motor recovery and to provide information about the cortical regions that should be targeted in rehabilitation therapies based on real-time EEG.

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