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Published in: Clinical Neuroradiology 2/2023

Open Access 22-11-2022 | Magnetic Resonance Imaging | Original Article

Topographic Mapping of Isolated Thalamic Infarcts Using Vascular and Novel Probabilistic Functional Thalamic Landmarks

Authors: Maximilian Rauch, Jan-Rüdiger Schüre, Franziska Lieschke, Fee Keil, Eike Steidl, Se-jong You, Christian Foerch, Elke Hattingen, Stefan Weidauer, Martin A. Schaller-Paule

Published in: Clinical Neuroradiology | Issue 2/2023

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Abstract

Purpose

We aimed to re-evaluate the relationship between thalamic infarct (TI) localization and clinical symptoms using a vascular (VTM) and a novel functional territorial thalamic map (FTM).

Methods

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and clinical data of 65 patients with isolated TI were evaluated (female n = 23, male n = 42, right n = 23, left n = 42). A VTM depicted the known seven thalamic vascular territories (VT: inferolateral, anterolateral, inferomedial, posterior, central, anteromedian, posterolateral). An FTM was generated from a probabilistic thalamic nuclei atlas to determine six functionally defined territories (FT: anterior: memory/emotions; ventral: motor/somatosensory/language; medial: behavior/emotions/nociception, oculomotor; intralaminar: arousal/pain; lateral: visuospatial/somatosensory/conceptual and analytic thinking; posterior: audiovisual/somatosensory). Four neuroradiologists independently assigned diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) lesions to the territories mapped by the VTM and FTM. Findings were correlated with clinical features.

Results

The most frequent symptom was a hemisensory syndrome (58%), which was not specific for any territory. A co-occurrence of hemisensory syndrome and hemiparesis had positive predictive values (PPV) of 76% and 82% for the involvement of the inferolateral VT and ventral FT, respectively. Thalamic aphasia had a PPV of 63% each for involvement of the anterolateral VT and ventral FT. Neglect was associated with involvement of the inferolateral VT/ventral FT. Interrater reliability for the assignment of DWI lesions to the VTM was fair (κ = 0.36), but good (κ = 0.73) for the FTM.

Conclusion

The FTM revealed a greater reproducibility for the topographical assignment of TI than the VTM. Sensorimotor hemiparesis and neglect are predictive for a TI in the inferolateral VT/ventral FT. The hemisensory syndrome alone does not allow any topographical assignment.
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Metadata
Title
Topographic Mapping of Isolated Thalamic Infarcts Using Vascular and Novel Probabilistic Functional Thalamic Landmarks
Authors
Maximilian Rauch
Jan-Rüdiger Schüre
Franziska Lieschke
Fee Keil
Eike Steidl
Se-jong You
Christian Foerch
Elke Hattingen
Stefan Weidauer
Martin A. Schaller-Paule
Publication date
22-11-2022
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Clinical Neuroradiology / Issue 2/2023
Print ISSN: 1869-1439
Electronic ISSN: 1869-1447
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00062-022-01225-3

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