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July 25, 2006; 67 (2) Brief Communications

Longitudinal fMRI study for locomotor recovery in patients with stroke

Y. H. Kim, S. H. You, Y. H. Kwon, M. Hallett, J. H. Kim, S. H. Jang
First published July 24, 2006, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/01.wnl.0000225178.85833.0d
Y. H. Kim
MD, PhD
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S. H. You
PT, PhD
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Y. H. Kwon
PT, MS
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M. Hallett
MD
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J. H. Kim
PT, PhD
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S. H. Jang
MD
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Citation
Longitudinal fMRI study for locomotor recovery in patients with stroke
Y. H. Kim, S. H. You, Y. H. Kwon, M. Hallett, J. H. Kim, S. H. Jang
Neurology Jul 2006, 67 (2) 330-333; DOI: 10.1212/01.wnl.0000225178.85833.0d

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Abstract

The authors investigated bihemispheric motor network reorganization supporting locomotor recovery after stroke over time. They determined longitudinal changes in locomotor function and fMRI in 10 stroke patients at the subacute stage and the chronic stage. The results suggest that the bihemispheric reorganization mechanism underlying locomotor recovery evolved from the ipsilateral (contralesional) primary sensorimotor cortex (SM1) activation at the subacute stage to the contralateral (ipsilesional) SM1 activation at the chronic stage.

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