Larger perivascular space volume fraction is associated with worse post-stroke sensorimotor outcomes: An ENIGMA analysis

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Abstract

ABSTRACT BACKGROUND Perivascular Spaces (PVS) are a marker of cerebral small vessel disease (CSVD) that are visible on brain imaging. Larger PVS has been associated with poor quality of life and cognitive impairment post-stroke. However, the association between PVS and post-stroke sensorimotor outcomes has not been investigated. METHODS 602 individuals with a history of stroke across 24 research cohorts from the ENIGMA Stroke Recovery Working Group were included. PVS volume fractions were obtained using a validated, automated segmentation pipeline from the basal ganglia (BG) and white matter centrum semiovale (CSO), separately. Robust mixed effects regressions were used to a) examine the cross-sectional association between PVS volume fraction and post-stroke sensorimotor outcomes and b) to examine whether PVS volume fraction was associated with other measures of CSVD and overall brain health (e.g., white matter hyperintensities [WMHs], brain age [measured by predicted age difference, brain-PAD]). RESULTS Larger PVS volume fraction in the CSO, but not BG, was associated with worse post-stroke sensorimotor outcomes (b = -0.06, p = 0.047). Higher burden of deep WMH (b = 0.25, p <0.001), periventricular WMH (b = 0.16, p <0.001) and higher brain-PAD (b = 0.09, p <0.001) were associated with larger PVS volume fraction in the CSO. CONCLUSIONS Our data show that PVS volume fraction in the CSO is cross-sectionally associated with sensorimotor outcomes after stroke, above and beyond standard lesion metrics. PVS may provide insight into how the overall vascular health of the brain impacts inter-individual differences in post-stroke sensorimotor outcomes.

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00