Neuropediatrics 2002; 33(3): 162-165
DOI: 10.1055/s-2002-33680
Short Communication

Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Brain Reorganisation in Cerebral Palsy: A High-Field Functional MRI Study

R. S. Briellmann1 , D. F. Abbott1 , U. Caflisch2 , J. S. Archer1 , G. D. Jackson1
  • 1 Brain Research Institute, Austin and Repatriation Medical Centre and The University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
  • 2 Centre for Cerebral Palsy at the Children's Hospital, Luzern, Switzerland
Further Information

Publication History

Received: 8 November 2001

Accepted after Revision: 11 March 2002

Publication Date:
18 September 2002 (online)

Abstract

Early brain damage may induce alternative organisation of cortical brain functions. This may happen even if there is no damage to the cortex. We assessed a 15-year-old girl with a perinatal left-sided subcortical lesion without cortical damage by functional MRI at 3 Tesla. The patient had congenital hemiparesis, mirrored limb movements and normal language function. Functional MRI was used to assess language using orthographic-lexical retrieval and noun-verb generation tasks, and demonstrated right-sided language dominance. Functional MRI of motor function was assessed for both hands separately, by squeezing a rubber balloon. Both hand movements induced asymmetric bilateral activation of the motor cortex, with a predominance of contralateral activation. Language-associated activity is usually left-hemispheric, but was found in the undamaged right-sided hemisphere. Motor function was associated with the unusual pattern of bilateral cortical activation. The MR findings explain the clinical features and suggest widespread alternative cortical organisation in the presence of a focal lesion confined to subcortical structures.

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Prof. Graeme Jackson

Brain Research Institute, Neurosciences Building, A & RMC
Repatriation Campus

Banksia Street West Heidelberg

Victoria, 3081

Australia

Email: BRI@brain.org.au

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