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Targeted mini-strokes produce changes in interhemispheric sensory signal processing that are indicative of disinhibition within minutes

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TLDR
It is suggested that acute stroke activates unique pathways that can rapidly redistribute function within the spared cortical hemisphere within 30–50 min of stroke onset, and not merely loss of activity.
Abstract
Most processing of sensation involves the cortical hemisphere opposite (contralateral) to the stimulated limb. Stroke patients can exhibit changes in the interhemispheric balance of sensory signal processing. It is unclear whether these changes are the result of poststroke rewiring and experience, or whether they could result from the immediate effect of circuit loss. We evaluated the effect of mini-strokes over short timescales (<2 h) where cortical rewiring is unlikely by monitoring sensory-evoked activity throughout much of both cortical hemispheres using voltage-sensitive dye imaging. Blockade of a single pial arteriole within the C57BL6J mouse forelimb somatosensory cortex reduced the response evoked by stimulation of the limb contralateral to the stroke. However, after stroke, the ipsilateral (uncrossed) forelimb response within the unaffected hemisphere was spared and became independent of the contralateral forelimb cortex. Within the unaffected hemisphere, mini-strokes in the opposite hemisphere significantly enhanced sensory responses produced by stimulation of either contralateral or ipsilateral pathways within 30-50 min of stroke onset. Stroke-induced enhancement of responses within the spared hemisphere was not reproduced by inhibition of either cortex or thalamus using pharmacological agents in nonischemic animals. I/LnJ acallosal mice showed similar rapid interhemispheric redistribution of sensory processing after stroke, suggesting that subcortical connections and not transcallosal projections were mediating the novel activation patterns. Thalamic inactivation before stroke prevented the bilateral rearrangement of sensory responses. These findings suggest that acute stroke, and not merely loss of activity, activates unique pathways that can rapidly redistribute function within the spared cortical hemisphere.

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Evidence-based guidelines on the therapeutic use of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS)

TL;DR: There is a sufficient body of evidence to accept with level A (definite efficacy) the analgesic effect of high-frequency rTMS of the primary motor cortex (M1) contralateral to the pain and the antidepressant effect of HF-rT MS of the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC).
Journal ArticleDOI

Diaschisis: past, present, future.

Emmanuel Carrera, +1 more
- 01 Sep 2014 - 
TL;DR: The development of new imaging techniques allows a better understanding of the complexity of brain organization and it is now possible to reliably investigate a new type of diaschisis defined as the changes of structural and functional connectivity between brain areas distant to the lesion.
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Recovery after brain injury: mechanisms and principles

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a review of studies that have demonstrated the neurophysiological and neuroanatomical changes that are triggered by motor experience, by injury, and the interaction of these processes.
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Two-Photon Microscopy as a Tool to Study Blood Flow and Neurovascular Coupling in the Rodent Brain

TL;DR: The surgical procedures required to generate cranial windows for optical access to the cortex of both rats and mice and the use of two-photon microscopy to accurately measure blood flow in individual cortical vessels concurrent with local cellular activity are described.
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The smallest stroke: Occlusion of one penetrating vessel leads to infarction and a cognitive deficit

TL;DR: Control optical methods used to create occlusions of individual penetrating arterioles or venules in rat cortex imply that microinfarcts likely contribute to cognitive decline, and strategies that have received limited success in the treatment of ischemic injury may be successful against the progressive nature of vascular dementia.
References
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Inflammation in areas of remote changes following focal brain lesion

TL;DR: The inflammatory changes in remote areas might be involved in the pathogenesis of secondary neuronal damage in focal brain lesions and retrograde degeneration.
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Neuronal Circuit Remodeling in the Contralateral Cortical Hemisphere during Functional Recovery from Cerebral Infarction

TL;DR: The left somatosensory cortex can compensate for the loss of the right somatosENSory cortex by remodeling neuronal circuits and establishing new sensory processing in intact ipsilateral hemisphere during recovery.
Journal ArticleDOI

Large-Scale Reorganization in the Somatosensory Cortex and Thalamus after Sensory Loss in Macaque Monkeys

TL;DR: A comparison of the extents of deafferentation across the monkeys shows that even if the dorsal column lesion is partial, preserving most of the hand representation, it is sufficient to induce an expansion of the face representation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recurrent spontaneous spreading depolarizations facilitate acute dendritic injury in the ischemic penumbra.

TL;DR: It is proposed that metabolic stress resulting from recurring SDs facilitates acute injury at the level of dendrites and dendritic spines in metabolically compromised tissue, expediting penumbral recruitment into the ischemic core.
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