subcortical mapping
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

53
(FIVE YEARS 23)

H-INDEX

12
(FIVE YEARS 1)

2021 ◽  
pp. 152574012110568
Author(s):  
Christos Papatzalas ◽  
Ilias Papathanasiou ◽  
Thanasis Paschalis ◽  
Christos Tzerefos ◽  
Eftychia Kapsalaki ◽  
...  

Awake brain surgery allows for maximal tumor resection, while minimizing postoperative deficits, even when the tumor is located within eloquent brain regions. In the current study, we present the case of a patient who underwent awake craniotomy to remove a space-occupying lesion located at the left (dominant) temporal lobe. During subcortical mapping, electrical stimulation of the inferior longitudinal fasciculus caused severe errors (paralexias) on a semantic odd-word out task, but not on other tasks that use different input routes and processes. The cognitive neuropsychological model for single word processing assisted us to associate a specific structure (inferior longitudinal fascicle (ILF)) with a specific cognitive process (i.e., access to the semantic system). Our results highlight the importance of subcortical fascicles in reading and agree with previous studies regarding the critical role of ILF in reading comprehension.


2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (Supplement_6) ◽  
pp. vi224-vi224
Author(s):  
Fumio Yamaguchi

Abstract Brain mapping is a gold standard for the surgery of tumors in eloquent area. Especially subcortical mapping is an essential method for the preservation of important neural fibers conveying motor, sensory and even higher brain functions such as language control. The efforts to estimate the fiber localizations in brain white matter sometimes result in the unprecise identification that is caused by several factors including electrical heterogeneity of brain tissues. To solve this long-standing problem, NY Tract Finder (Yamaguchi Tract Finder) was invented and has been used for intraoperative brain mappings. Now this electrode and method is used in more than 30 major hospitals in Japan, China, Taiwan and Russia. The novel and unique neural fiber positioning technique and our efforts for the maximal preservation of patients’ QOL will be introduced.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
Ramin A. Morshed ◽  
Anthony T. Lee ◽  
Elaina J. Wang ◽  
Jacob S. Young ◽  
Soonmee Cha ◽  
...  

OBJECTIVE The clinical outcomes for patients undergoing resection of diffuse glioma within the middle frontal gyrus (MFG) are understudied. Anatomically, the MFG is richly interconnected to known language areas, and nearby subcortical fibers are at risk during resection. The goal of this study was to determine the functional outcomes and intraoperative mapping results related to resection of MFG gliomas. Additionally, the study aimed to evaluate if subcortical tract disruption on imaging correlated with functional outcomes. METHODS The authors performed a retrospective review of 39 patients with WHO grade II–IV diffuse gliomas restricted to only the MFG and underlying subcortical region that were treated with resection and had no prior treatment. Intraoperative mapping results and postoperative neurological deficits by discharge and 90 days were assessed. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) tractography was used to assess subcortical tract integrity on pre- and postoperative imaging. RESULTS The mean age of the cohort was 37.9 years at surgery, and the median follow-up was 5.1 years. The mean extent of resection was 98.9% for the cohort. Of the 39 tumors, 24 were left sided (61.5%). Thirty-six patients (92.3%) underwent intraoperative mapping, with 59% of patients undergoing an awake craniotomy. No patients had positive cortical mapping sites overlying the tumor, and 12 patients (33.3%) had positive subcortical stimulation sites. By discharge, 8 patients had language dysfunction, and 5 patients had mild weakness. By 90 days, 2 patients (5.1%) had persistent mild hand weakness only. There were no persistent language deficits by 90 days. On univariate analysis, preoperative tumor size (p = 0.0001), positive subcortical mapping (p = 0.03), preoperative tumor invasion of neighboring subcortical tracts on DTI tractography (p = 0.0003), and resection cavity interruption of subcortical tracts on DTI tractography (p < 0.0001) were associated with an increased risk of having a postoperative deficit by discharge. There were no instances of complete subcortical tract transections in the cohort. CONCLUSIONS MFG diffuse gliomas may undergo extensive resection with minimal risk for long-term morbidity. Partial subcortical tract interruption may lead to transient but not permanent deficits. Subcortical mapping is essential to reduce permanent morbidity during resection of MFG tumors by avoiding complete transection of critical subcortical tracts.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Seiichiro Hirono ◽  
Ko Ozaki ◽  
Masayoshi Kobayashi ◽  
Ayaka Hara ◽  
Tomohiro Yamaki ◽  
...  

AbstractThe oncological and functional outcomes in glioblastoma (GBM) patients following supratotal resection (SupTR), involving complete resection of contrast-enhancing enhanced (CE) tumors and areas of methionine (Met) uptake on 11C-met positron emission tomography (Met-PET), are unknown. We conducted a retrospective review in newly diagnosed, IDH1 wild-type GBM patients, comparing SupTR with gross total resection (GTR), in which only CE tumor tissue was resected. All patients underwent standard radiotherapy and temozolomide treatment, and were followed for tumor recurrence and overall survival (OS). Among the 30 patients included in this study, 7 underwent SupTR and 23 underwent GTR. Awake craniotomy with cortical and subcortical mapping was more frequently performed in the SupTR group than in the GTR group. During the follow-up period, significantly different patterns of disease progression were observed between groups. Although more than 80% of recurrences were local in the GTR group, all recurrences in the SupTR group were distant. Median OS in the GTR and SupTR groups was 18.5 months (95% confidence interval [CI] 14.2–35.1) and not reached (95% CI 30.5-not estimable), respectively; this difference was statistically significant (p = 0.03 by log-rank test). No postoperative neurocognitive decline was evident in patients who underwent SupTR. Compared to GTR alone, aggressive resection of both CE tumors and areas with Met uptake (SupTR) under awake craniotomy with functional mapping results in a survival benefit associated with better local control and neurocognitive preservation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmed Jorge ◽  
Witold J Lipksi ◽  
Dengyu Wang ◽  
Donald J Crammond ◽  
Robert S. Turner ◽  
...  

The importance of the basal ganglia in modulating cognitive and motor behaviors is well known, yet how the basal ganglia participate in the uniquely human behavior of speech is poorly understood. The subthalamic nucleus (STN) is well positioned to facilitate two basal ganglia functions critical for speech: motor learning and gain modulation. Using a novel paradigm to study cortical-subcortical interactions during speech in patients undergoing awake DBS surgery, we found evidence for a left opercular hyperdirect pathway in humans by stimulating in the STN and examining antidromic evoked activity in the left temporal, parietal and frontal opercular cortex. These high resolution cortical and subcortical mapping data provided evidence for hyperdirect connectivity between Broca area (typically corresponding to pars triangularis and pars opercularis of the inferior frontal gyrus) and the STN. In addition, we observed evoked potentials consistent with the presence of monosynaptic projections from areas of opercular speech cortex that are primarily sensory, including auditory cortex, to the STN. These connections may be unique to humans, evolving alongside the ability for speech.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandre Roux ◽  
Anne-Laure Lemaitre ◽  
Jeremy Deverdun ◽  
Sam Ng ◽  
Hugues Duffau ◽  
...  

The inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus (IFOF) is one of the longest association fiber tracts of the brain. According to the most recent anatomical studies, it may be formed by several layers, suggesting a role in multiple cognitive functions. However, to date, no attempt has been made to dissociate the functional contribution of the IFOF subpathways. In this study, real-time, cortico-subcortical mapping with direct electrostimulation was performed in 111 patients operated on in wide-awake surgery for a right low-grade glioma. Patients performed two behavioral tasks during stimulation, tapping, respectively, mentalizing and visual semantic cognition—two functions supposed to be partly mediated by the IFOF. Responsive white matter sites were first subjected to a clustering analysis to assess potential topological differences in network organization. Then they were used as seeds to generate streamline tractograms based on the HC1021 diffusion dataset (template-based approach). The tractograms obtained for each function were overlapped and contrasted to determine whether some fiber pathways were more frequently involved in one or the other function. The obtained results not only provided strong evidence for a role of the right IFOF in both functions, but also revealed that the tract is dissociable into two functional strata according to a ventral (semantic) and dorsal (mentalizing) compartmentalization. Besides, they showed a high degree of anatomo-functionnal variability across patients in the functional implication of the IFOF, possibly related to symmetrical/hemispheric differences in network organization. Collectively, these findings support the view that the right IFOF is a functionally multi-layered structure, with nevertheless interindividual variations.


2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 62-73
Author(s):  
A. Yu. Ermolaev ◽  
L. Ya. Kravets ◽  
E. A. Klyuev ◽  
K. S. Yashin ◽  
E. V. Lobanova ◽  
...  

The aim of the study was development of the method for preoperative quantitative evaluation of pyramidal tract and tumor relationship in malignant intracerebral tumors.Materials and methods. The retrospective analysis of 62 patients underwent surgery at the Department of Neurosurgery of Privolzhsky Research Medical University in 2017–2019, was performed. The patients were divide in 3 groups: metastatic brain tumor (n = 16); contrast-enhanced gliomas (grade III–IV); contrast-nonenhanced gliomas (grade II–III). The following protocol was implemented for all patients: preoperative DTI-tractography; intraoperative direct subcortical electrical stimulation with fixation of the minimum current intensity at receiving the motor response; pre- and postoperative motor function assessment using MRC-scale. Tract Involvement Index (TII) based on the ratio of the perimeter of the part of the tract involvement in pathological MRI-signal to its cross-section area was calculated using image processing of preoperative MRI and MRI-tractography data.Results. The association between TII values (from 0 to 1.75) and the severity of pre-operative paresis was demonstrated. We have discovered that the greater value of the pyramidal TII was corresponded to the greater severity of the paresis in MRC (p <0.001, n = 62). The analysis of TII values and intraoperative motor direct subcortical mapping results showed an increase in risk of contact with a tract at higher TII value (B0 = −1.6; Bi = 6.61; χ2 = 30.53; n = 62, p <0.001). The TII demonstrates better prognostic value in patients without radiation therapy in anamnesis.Conclusions. The method for preoperative quantitative evaluation of pyramidal tract and tumor relationship using TII calculation can provide additional information for planning surgical treatment in patients with intracerebral tumors without radiation treatment in the history.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ricardo A Domingo ◽  
Tito Vivas-Buitrago ◽  
Gaetano De Biase ◽  
Erik H Middlebrooks ◽  
Perry S Bechtle ◽  
...  

Abstract BACKGROUND AND IMPORTANCE Data supporting the use of electrocorticography (ECoG) monitoring during electrical stimulation in awake craniotomies for resection of supratentorial neoplasms is robust, but its applicability during active resection is often limited by the inability to keep the array in place. Given the known survival benefit of gross total resection in glioma surgery, novel approaches to surgical monitoring are warranted to maximize safe resection and optimize surgical outcomes in patients with glioblastoma. CLINICAL PRESENTATION A 68-yr-old right-handed woman presented to the emergency department with confusion. Imaging studies revealed a bifrontal intra-axial brain lesion. She underwent a left-sided awake craniotomy procedure with cortical and subcortical mapping. During surgical resection, multiple electrographic seizures were detected on continuous ECoG monitoring with a customized 22-channel high-density hollow circular array. She remained without clinical evidence of seizures at 3 mo after surgery. CONCLUSION We report a unique case of serial electrographic seizures detected during continuous intraoperative ECoG monitoring during active surgical resection of a glioblastoma using a novel circular hollow array during an awake craniotomy. The use of continuous ECoG monitoring during active resection may provide additional data, with potential influence in outcomes for patients undergoing resection of high-grade glial neoplasms.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Henri-Arthur Leroy ◽  
Ondine Strachowksi ◽  
Constantin Tuleasca ◽  
Quentin Vannod-Michel ◽  
Emilie Le Rhun ◽  
...  

AbstractFronto-temporo-insular (FTI) gliomas continue to represent a surgical challenge despite numerous technical advances. Some authors advocate for surgery in awake condition even for non-dominant hemisphere FTI, due to risk of sociocognitive impairment. Here, we report outcomes in a series of patients operated using intraoperative magnetic resonance imaging (IoMRI) guided surgery under general anesthesia, using no cortical or subcortical mapping. We evaluated the extent of resection, functional and neuropsychological outcomes after IoMRI guided surgery under general anesthesia of FTI gliomas located in the non-dominant hemisphere. Twenty patients underwent FTI glioma resection using IoMRI in asleep condition. Seventeen tumors were de novo, three were recurrences. Tumor WHO grades were II:12, III:4, IV:4. Patients were evaluated before and after microsurgical resection, clinically, neuropsychologically (i.e., social cognition) and by volumetric MR measures (T1G+ for enhancing tumors, FLAIR for non-enhancing). Fourteen (70%) patients benefited from a second IoMRI. The median age was 33.5 years (range 24–56). Seizure was the inaugural symptom in 71% of patients. The median preoperative volume was 64.5 cm3 (min 9.9, max 211). Fourteen (70%) patients underwent two IoMRI. The final median EOR was 92% (range 69–100). The median postoperative residual tumor volume (RTV) was 4.3 cm3 (range 0–38.2). A vast majority of residual tumors were located in the posterior part of the insula. Early postoperative clinical events (during hospital stay) were three transient left hemiparesis (which lasted less than 48 h) and one prolonged left brachio-facial hemiparesis. Sixty percent of patients were free of any symptom at discharge. The median Karnofsky Performance Score was of 90 both at discharge and at 3 months. No significant neuropsychological impairment was reported, excepting empathy distinction in less than 40% of patients. After surgery, 45% of patients could go back to work. In our experience and using IoMRI as an adjunct, microsurgical resection of non-dominant FTI gliomas under general anesthesia is safe. Final median EOR was 92%, with a vast majority of residual tumors located in the posterior insular part. Patients experienced minor neurological and neuropsychological morbidity. Moreover, neuropsychological evaluation reported a high preservation of sociocognitive abilities. Solely empathy seemed to be impaired in some patients.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seiichiro Hirono ◽  
Ko Ozaki ◽  
Masayoshi Kobayashi ◽  
Ayaka Hara ◽  
Tomohiro Yamaki ◽  
...  

Abstract Purpose. The oncological and functional outcomes in glioblastoma (GBM) patients following supratotal resection (SupTR), involving complete resection of contrast-enhancing enhanced (CE) tumors and areas of methionine (Met) uptake on 11C-met positron emission tomography (Met-PET), are unknown.Methods. We conducted a retrospective review in newly diagnosed, IDH1 wild-type GBM patients, comparing SupTR with gross total resection (GTR), in which only CE tumor tissue was resected. All patients underwent standard radiotherapy and temozolomide treatment, and were followed for tumor recurrence and overall survival (OS).Results. Among the 30 patients included in this study, 7 underwent SupTR and 23 underwent GTR. Awake craniotomy with cortical and subcortical mapping was more frequently performed in the SupTR group than in the GTR group. During the follow-up period, significantly different patterns of disease progression were observed between groups. Although more than 80% of recurrences were local in the GTR group, all recurrences in the SupTR group were distant. Median OS in the GTR and SupTR groups was 18.5 months (95% confidence interval [CI], 14.2-35.1) and not reached (95% CI, 30.5-not estimable), respectively; this difference was statistically significant (p=0.03 by log-rank test). No postoperative neurocognitive decline was evident in patients who underwent SupTR.Conclusion. Compared to GTR alone, aggressive resection of both CE tumors and areas with Met uptake (SupTR) under awake craniotomy with functional mapping results in a survival benefit associated with better local control and neurocognitive preservation.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document