Abstract
Background: Post-stroke motor rehabilitation involves significant neuroplastic adaptation. While the behavioural outcomes of sensorimotor training are established, the precise cortical reorganization patterns in human patients remain incompletely characterised.
Methods: Eighty-four patients (mean age 61.3 ± 9.2 years; 47 male) with first-ever ischaemic stroke underwent a 12-week structured sensorimotor training programme. Resting-state and task-based fMRI was acquired at baseline, week 6, and week 12. Whole-brain activation maps and connectivity matrices were analysed using SPM12 with permutation-based correction.
Results: Significant ipsilesional M1 reactivation was observed at week 12 (z = 4.21, p < 0.001, FWE-corrected), correlated with upper-limb Fugl-Meyer score improvement (r = 0.61, p < 0.001). Contralesional recruitment decreased progressively, indicating a compensatory-to-restorative shift in cortical strategy.
Conclusions: Twelve weeks of structured sensorimotor training drives measurable cortical remapping toward ipsilesional M1, mirroring functional recovery. These findings support targeted neuroplasticity-based rehabilitation protocols.
1. Introduction
Stroke remains the leading cause of acquired adult disability worldwide, with motor impairment affecting approximately 80% of survivors in the acute phase [1]. While spontaneous neurological recovery is well documented within the first weeks post-onset, a large proportion of patients retain chronic deficits that profoundly impair quality of life and independence [2,3].
The neurobiological substrate of motor recovery involves plastic reorganisation of perilesional and contralesional cortical tissue, mediated by Hebbian strengthening of surviving neural circuits, axonal sprouting, and synaptogenesis [4]. Functional neuroimaging, particularly fMRI, has proven indispensable in mapping these changes longitudinally in living patients [5,6].
Despite a growing body of evidence, the precise trajectory of cortical reorganisation under structured sensorimotor training — as opposed to unguided spontaneous recovery — remains poorly characterised. The present study aimed to fill this gap by tracking whole-brain fMRI activation and resting-state connectivity in a longitudinal cohort of 84 patients undergoing a standardised 12-week training programme.
2. Methods
2.1 Participants
Eighty-four adults (47 male, 37 female; mean age 61.3 ± 9.2 years, range 42–78) with radiologically confirmed first-ever unilateral ischaemic stroke were recruited from three rehabilitation centres between January 2022 and June 2024. Inclusion criteria were: (i) stroke onset 2–8 weeks prior to enrolment; (ii) residual upper-limb motor deficit (Fugl-Meyer Assessment score 15–55); (iii) no contraindications to MRI. The study was approved by the institutional review boards of all participating centres (protocol ID: WUM/2021/0834) and written informed consent was obtained from all participants.
2.2 Sensorimotor Training Protocol
The 12-week programme comprised 45-minute daily sessions (5 days/week) combining task-oriented reaching tasks, proprioceptive perturbation exercises, and mirror therapy. Sessions were supervised by certified physiotherapists and were progressively intensified using a 3-phase periodisation model. Adherence was monitored via session logs and wearable accelerometry.
2.3 fMRI Acquisition & Analysis
MRI data were acquired on 3T Siemens Prisma scanners using a 32-channel head coil (TR = 2000 ms, TE = 30 ms, flip angle = 77°, 3 mm isotropic voxels). Resting-state and motor task (finger-tapping) paradigms were administered at baseline, week 6, and week 12. Preprocessing and statistical analysis followed SPM12 pipelines with permutation-based FWE correction at α = 0.05.
3. Results
At baseline, task-based fMRI demonstrated predominant contralesional M1 activation across the cohort, consistent with early compensatory recruitment. By week 6, a bilateral pattern was evident, with ipsilesional M1 reactivation in 61 of 84 participants (72.6%). At week 12, significant ipsilesional M1 activation was observed group-wide (z = 4.21, p < 0.001, FWE-corrected), accompanied by a reduction in contralesional signal (z = −2.87, p = 0.004).
Fugl-Meyer scores improved significantly over 12 weeks (baseline: 31.4 ± 10.2; week 12: 48.7 ± 9.8; t(83) = 14.6, p < 0.001). The change in ipsilesional M1 activation magnitude was strongly correlated with Fugl-Meyer score improvement (r = 0.61, 95% CI [0.47, 0.72], p < 0.001), indicating a neuroimaging biomarker of functional recovery.
4. Discussion
Our findings extend prior work by characterising the full 12-week trajectory of cortical reorganisation under a structured, high-dosage sensorimotor protocol. The progressive shift from contralesional to ipsilesional M1 dominance replicates cross-sectional observations [7,8] and aligns with the restorative-vs-compensatory framework of post-stroke plasticity proposed by Ward and colleagues [9].
Importantly, the correlation between cortical reorganisation and functional outcome (r = 0.61) suggests that ipsilesional M1 reactivation is not merely epiphenomenal but mechanistically linked to motor improvement. This observation has practical implications: fMRI-based biomarkers could potentially guide personalised rehabilitation scheduling and identify patients most likely to benefit from intensive training.
5. Conclusions
Twelve weeks of structured sensorimotor training drives a measurable, progressive shift toward ipsilesional M1 dominance in post-stroke patients, strongly correlated with functional motor recovery. These results support the development of neuroplasticity-informed rehabilitation protocols and highlight fMRI as a viable biomarker in clinical trial design.
References
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Conflict of Interest: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
Funding: This work was supported by the European Research Council (ERC-2021-CoG #101044231) and the Polish National Science Centre (grant no. 2021/41/B/NZ4/03982).