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Right Brain Scan Could Aid in Stroke Recovery: Study: MedlinePlus

Right Brain Scan Could Aid in Stroke Recovery: Study: MedlinePlus

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Right Brain Scan Could Aid in Stroke Recovery: Study

It might help predict speech and language recovery in those who suffer stroke in brain's left side, researchers find
     
By Robert Preidt
Thursday, March 31, 2016
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THURSDAY, March 31, 2016 (HealthDay News) -- Examining the right side of the brain might help predict speech and language recovery in people who suffer a stroke on the left side of the brain, researchers say.
The left side of the brain is dominant in language and speech. And, stroke damage on that side often results in difficulty speaking, naming, repeating and understanding language -- a condition called aphasia, explained the authors of the study, published March 30 in the journal Neurology.
"Aphasia is a common and devastating symptom for people who have strokes on the left side of the brain," said study author Dr. Gottfried Schlaug of Harvard Medical School, in Boston. "Although many people recover to some degree, many people never make a full recovery, even after intense speech therapy," he said in a journal news release.
Schlaug and his colleagues used MRI brain scans and speech-fluency tests to assess 33 people, average age 58, who had suffered a stroke on the left side of the brain and still had different levels of aphasia despite receiving speech therapy. On average, the patients' strokes occurred 2.5 years before the tests.
The researchers found that patients who did better on the speech-fluency tests were more likely to have higher structural integrity on the right side of the brain. Higher structural integrity may mean better connections among areas of the brain.
The findings suggest that the right side of the brain may reorganize itself to assist language/speech recovery in people who suffer a stroke on the left side of the brain. But it's also possible that the patients with greater speech/language recovery already had higher structural integrity and more connectivity on the right side of the brain before their stroke, the researchers said.
Dr. A.M. Barrett, a neurologist from the Kessler Foundation, in West Orange, N.J., wrote an accompanying editorial in the journal. "This study suggests that a well-wired right brain actively supports recovery from aphasia," she said in the release.
"More research is needed to determine if the differences in structural integrity in the right brain are there before a stroke, develop after a stroke or are influenced by some other factor. Eventually, it may be possible to develop new targets in the right brain for people with aphasia to be treated with new therapies, such as brain stimulation," Barrett noted.
SOURCE: Neurology, news release, March 30, 2016
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