Perfusion imaging in Pusher syndrome to investigate the neural substrates involved in controlling upright body position.

Bibliographic Details
Title: Perfusion imaging in Pusher syndrome to investigate the neural substrates involved in controlling upright body position.
Authors: Luca Francesco Ticini, Uwe Klose, Thomas Nägele, Hans-Otto Karnath
Source: PLoS ONE, Vol 4, Iss 5, p e5737 (2009)
Publisher Information: Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2009.
Publication Year: 2009
Collection: LCC:Medicine
LCC:Science
Subject Terms: Medicine, Science
More Details: Brain damage may induce a dysfunction of upright body position termed "pusher syndrome". Patients with such disorder suffer from an alteration of their sense of body verticality. They experience their body as oriented upright when actually tilted nearly 20 degrees to the ipsilesional side. Pusher syndrome typically is associated with posterior thalamic stroke; less frequently with extra-thalamic lesions. This argued for a fundamental role of these structures in our control of upright body posture. Here we investigated whether such patients may show additional functional or metabolic abnormalities outside the areas of brain lesion. We investigated 19 stroke patients with thalamic or with extra-thalamic lesions showing versus not showing misperception of body orientation. We measured fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery (FLAIR) imaging, diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), and perfusion-weighted imaging (PWI). This allowed us to determine the structural damage as well as to identify the malperfused but structural intact tissue. Pusher patients with thalamic lesions did not show dysfunctional brain areas in addition to the ones found to be structurally damaged. In the pusher patients with extra-thalamic lesions, the thalamus was neither structurally damaged nor malperfused. Rather, these patients showed small regions of abnormal perfusion in the structurally intact inferior frontal gyrus, middle temporal gyrus, inferior parietal lobule, and parietal white matter. The results indicate that these extra-thalamic brain areas contribute to the network controlling upright body posture. The data also suggest that damage of the neural tissue in the posterior thalamus itself rather than additional malperfusion in distant cortical areas is associated with pusher syndrome. Hence, it seems as if the normal functioning of both extra-thalamic as well as posterior thalamic structures is integral to perceiving gravity and controlling upright body orientation in humans.
Document Type: article
File Description: electronic resource
Language: English
ISSN: 1932-6203
Relation: http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2684628?pdf=render; https://doaj.org/toc/1932-6203
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0005737
Access URL: https://doaj.org/article/99c6e1054706438ba10106f284fff1dc
Accession Number: edsdoj.99c6e1054706438ba10106f284fff1dc
Database: Directory of Open Access Journals
More Details
ISSN:19326203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0005737
Published in:PLoS ONE
Language:English