Cerebral reorganization as a function of linguistic recovery in children: An fMRI study
Received 22 December 2008; received in revised form 29 May 2009 and 9 August 2009; accepted 11 November 2009. published online 08 February 2010. Corrected Proof
Abstract
Characterizing and mapping the relationship between neuronal reorganization and functional recovery are essential to the understanding of cerebral plasticity and the dynamic processes which occur following brain damage. The neuronal mechanisms underlying linguistic recovery following left hemisphere (LH) lesions are still unknown. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we investigated whether the extent of brain lateralization of linguistic functioning in specific regions of interest (ROIs) is correlated with the level of linguistic performance following recovery from acquired childhood aphasia. The study focused on a rare group of children in whom lesions occurred after normal language acquisition, but prior to complete maturation of the brain. During fMRI scanning, rhyming, comprehension and verb generation activation tasks were monitored. The imaging data were evaluated with reference to linguistic performance measured behaviorally during imaging, as well as outside the scanner. Compared with normal controls, we found greater right hemisphere (RH) lateralization in patients. However, correlations with linguistic performance showed that increased proficiency in linguistic tasks was associated with greater lateralization to the LH. These results were replicated in a longitudinal case study of a patient scanned twice, 3 years apart. Additional improvement in linguistic performance of the patient was accompanied by increasing lateralization to the LH in the anterior language region. This, however, was the result of a decreased involvement of the RH. These findings suggest that recovery is a dynamic, ongoing process, which may last for years after onset. The role of each hemisphere in the recovery process may continuously change within the chronic stage.
aPsychology Department, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel
bWohl Institute for Advanced Imaging, Sourasky Medical Center, Tel-Aviv, Israel
cPediatric Neurology, Sourasky Medial Center, Tel-Aviv, Israel
dBehavioral Sciences, Academic College of Tel Aviv-Yaffo, Israel
eLoewenstein Rehabilitation Center, Raanana, Israel
Corresponding author. Academic College of Tel Aviv-Yaffo, 14 Rabeinu Yerucham St., P.O. 8401, Yaffo 68114, Israel.
Corresponding author. Functional Brain Imaging Unit, Wohl Institute for Advanced Imaging, Tel-Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, 6 Weizmann Street, Tel-Aviv 64239, Israel.