Rationale: The corticobulbar tract (CBT) is known to be involved in the motor function of the non-oculomotor cranial nuclei and controls the muscles of the face, head, and neck. Several… Click to show full abstract
Rationale: The corticobulbar tract (CBT) is known to be involved in the motor function of the non-oculomotor cranial nuclei and controls the muscles of the face, head, and neck. Several studies have reported injury of the CBT in patients with brain injury, however, little is known about recovery of the injured CBT. Patient concerns: A 59-year-old right-handed male underwent decompressive craniectomy for management of brain swelling and intracerebral hemorrhage following an infarction in the left middle cerebral artery territory. Initially, the patient had showed severe dysphagia and had to be fed using a Levin tube. Five weeks after the onset of stroke, the patient was transferred to the rehabilitation department and underwent comprehensive rehabilitative therapy. Cranioplasty was performed eight weeks after the onset. The patient was completely recovered from dysphagia and the Levine tube was removed nine weeks after the onset. Interventions: Diffusion tensor imaging was performed twice; at five weeks and nine weeks from the onset. Outcome: On five-week diffusion tensor tractography (DTT), the right CBT was discontinued at the subcortical white matter and showed severe narrowing and the left CBT was not reconstructed. By contrast, on nine-week DTT, the right CBT was extended to the cerebral cortex and thickened while the left CBT remained not reconstructed in DTT. Lessons: This case demonstrates the association of the recovery of injured CBT with the recovery of dysphagia using DTT.
               
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