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Comparative Study
. 1996 Aug;154(2 Pt 1):436-41.
doi: 10.1164/ajrccm.154.2.8756819.

Impairment of central motor conduction to the diaphragm in stroke

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Comparative Study

Impairment of central motor conduction to the diaphragm in stroke

T Similowski et al. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 1996 Aug.

Abstract

Respiratory complications are common in patients with stroke, but the involvement of the diaphragm in this setting is not completely understood. The purpose of this study was to assess corticodiaphragmatic pathways in patients with vascular hemiplegia. Fifteen patients were studied, nine with a capsular type of hemiplegia. Seven age-matched subjects served as the control group, and eight healthy young volunteers were studied to validate the methods by comparison with the literature. Diaphragm electromyogram was recorded bilaterally, using surface electrodes. Abductor pollicis brevis electromyogram was also recorded. After having checked the integrity of peripheral conduction, corticofugal pathways were studied using cortical magnetic stimulation, a reproducible and patient-independent stimulus. Left and right conduction times to the diaphragm were symmetrical in the control subjects, the young volunteers, and the six patients with hemiplegia but without capsular lesion (16.5 to 20.1 ms). Conversely, they were markedly asymmetrical in patients with capsular hemiplegia, diaphragm response on the plegic side being abolished or markedly delayed. Although the clinical impact of these findings remains to be determined, this study confirms that "central diaphragm paralysis" can be present in stroke. It also indicates that there is no bilateral motor representation of each hemidiaphragm.

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