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Erschienen in: Journal of Neurology 6/2019

28.02.2019 | Original Communication

Aphasia outcome: the interactions between initial severity, lesion size and location

verfasst von: Sarah Benghanem, Charlotte Rosso, Céline Arbizu, Eric Moulton, Didier Dormont, Anne Leger, Christine Pires, Yves Samson

Erschienen in: Journal of Neurology | Ausgabe 6/2019

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Abstract

Objectives

The outcome of aphasia at 3 months is variable in patients with moderate/severe stroke. The aim was to predict 3-month aphasia outcome using prediction models including initial severity in addition to the interaction between lesion size and location at the acute phase.

Methods

Patients with post-stroke aphasia (assessed by the Aphasia Rapid Test at day 7-ART D7) and MRI performed at day 1 were enrolled (n = 73). Good outcome at 3-months was defined by an Aphasia Handicap Score of 0–2. Each infarct lesion was overlapped with an area of interest in the left temporo-parietal region to compute an intersection index (proportion of the critical region damaged by the infarct). We tested ART D7, age, lesion volume, and intersection index as well as a combined variable lesion volume*intersection in a univariate analysis. Then, we performed a multivariate analysis to investigate which variables were independent predictors of good outcome.

Results

ART at D7, infarct volume, and the intersection index were univariate predictors of good outcome. In the multivariate analysis, ART D7 and “volume ≥ 50 ml or intersection index ≥ 20%” correctly classified 89% of the patients (p < 0.0001). When added to the model, the interaction between both variables was significant indicating that the impact of the size or site variable depends on the initial severity of aphasia.

Conclusion

In patients with initially severe aphasia, large infarct size or critical damage in left temporoparietal junction is associated with poor language outcome at 3 months.
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Metadaten
Titel
Aphasia outcome: the interactions between initial severity, lesion size and location
verfasst von
Sarah Benghanem
Charlotte Rosso
Céline Arbizu
Eric Moulton
Didier Dormont
Anne Leger
Christine Pires
Yves Samson
Publikationsdatum
28.02.2019
Verlag
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Erschienen in
Journal of Neurology / Ausgabe 6/2019
Print ISSN: 0340-5354
Elektronische ISSN: 1432-1459
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00415-019-09259-3

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