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Research ArticlePediatric Neuroimaging

Selective Motor Control is a Clinical Correlate of Brain Motor Tract Impairment in Children with Spastic Bilateral Cerebral Palsy

A. Vuong, E.G. Fowler, J. Matsumoto, L.A. Staudt, H. Yokota and S.H. Joshi
American Journal of Neuroradiology September 2021, DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A7272
A. Vuong
aFrom the Departments of Bioengineering (A.V., S.H.J.)
bOrthopaedic Surgery (A.V., E.G.F., L.A.S.)
eCenter for Cerebral Palsy at UCLA/Orthopaedic Institute for Children (A.V., E.G.F., L.A.S.), Los Angeles, California
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E.G. Fowler
bOrthopaedic Surgery (A.V., E.G.F., L.A.S.)
eCenter for Cerebral Palsy at UCLA/Orthopaedic Institute for Children (A.V., E.G.F., L.A.S.), Los Angeles, California
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J. Matsumoto
cPediatrics (J.M.)
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L.A. Staudt
bOrthopaedic Surgery (A.V., E.G.F., L.A.S.)
eCenter for Cerebral Palsy at UCLA/Orthopaedic Institute for Children (A.V., E.G.F., L.A.S.), Los Angeles, California
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H. Yokota
fDepartment of Diagnostic Radiology and Radiation (H.Y.), Chiba University Hospital, Chiba, Japan
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S.H. Joshi
aFrom the Departments of Bioengineering (A.V., S.H.J.)
dAhmanson-Lovelace Brain Mapping Center in the Department of Neurology (S.H.J.), University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California
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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Selective voluntary motor control is an important factor influencing gross motor function, interjoint coordination, and the outcome of hamstring-lengthening surgery in spastic cerebral palsy. Using DTI, we investigated whether selective voluntary motor control would show strong correlations with WM motor tract microstructure and whether selective voluntary motor control is more sensitive to global WM impairment than gross motor function.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: Children with spastic bilateral cerebral palsy born preterm and typically developing children were recruited. The Selective Control Assessment of the Lower Extremity (SCALE) and Gross Motor Function Measure (GMFM) were assessed in participants with cerebral palsy. Participants underwent brain MR imaging to collect DWI data. Tract-Based Spatial Statistics was used to analyze the WM for between-group differences and correlations with SCALE and GMFM. ROI analyses compared motor regions.

RESULTS: Twelve children with cerebral palsy (mean age, 11.5 years) and 12 typically developing children (mean age, 10.3 years) participated. Altered DTI outcomes were found throughout the whole brain for the cerebral palsy group. SCALE, developed to evaluate selective voluntary motor control in cerebral palsy, showed significant positive correlations with fractional anisotropy in more WM voxels throughout the whole brain and for motor regions, including the corticospinal tract and corpus callosum, compared with GMFM. A significant negative correlation between radial diffusivity and SCALE, but not GMFM, was found within the corpus callosum.

CONCLUSIONS: SCALE was a more sensitive clinical correlate of motor and whole-brain WM tract impairment in children with spastic bilateral cerebral palsy, suggesting greater anisotropy and myelination in these regions for those with higher selective voluntary motor control.

ABBREVIATIONS:

AD
axial diffusivity
CC
corpus callosum
CerPed
cerebral peduncle
CP
cerebral palsy
CST
corticospinal tract
FA
fractional anisotropy
GMFCS
Gross Motor Function Classification System
GMFM
Gross Motor Function Measure
MD
mean diffusivity
PLIC
posterior limb of the internal capsule
RD
radial diffusivity
SCALE
Selective Control Assessment of the Lower Extremity
SCR
superior corona radiata
SVMC
selective voluntary motor control
TDC
typically developing children

Footnotes

  • MR imaging data acquisition and gait assessments were funded by donations and grants from the UCLA Children’s Discovery and Innovation Institute; Shapiro Family Foundation; United Cerebral Palsy of Los Angeles, Santa Barbara and Ventura Counties; Waters Foundation; California Community Foundation; Lena Longo Foundation; and UCLA Brain Mapping Center. No funders were involved in the preparation of this article.

  • Paper previously presented, in part, at: Annual Meeting of the American Academy for Cerebral Palsy and Developmental Medicine, September 18–21, 2019; Anaheim, California.

  • Disclosures: Eileen G. Fowler—RELATED: Grant: UCLA Children’s Discovery and Innovation Institute, Comments: This internal university grant provided funding for the MR images. Also, our institution received donations from individuals that supported salaries.* Joyce Matsumoto—RELATED: Grant: UCLA Children’s Discovery and Innovation Institute, Comments: Grant awarded to fund research MR images.* *Money paid to the institution.

  • © 2021 by American Journal of Neuroradiology
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A. Vuong, E.G. Fowler, J. Matsumoto, L.A. Staudt, H. Yokota, S.H. Joshi
Selective Motor Control is a Clinical Correlate of Brain Motor Tract Impairment in Children with Spastic Bilateral Cerebral Palsy
American Journal of Neuroradiology Sep 2021, DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A7272

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Selective Motor Control is a Clinical Correlate of Brain Motor Tract Impairment in Children with Spastic Bilateral Cerebral Palsy
A. Vuong, E.G. Fowler, J. Matsumoto, L.A. Staudt, H. Yokota, S.H. Joshi
American Journal of Neuroradiology Sep 2021, DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A7272
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