Reorganization of the Right Arcuate Fasciculus Following Left Arcuate Fasciculus Resection in Children With Intractable Epilepsy

2011 ◽  
Vol 26 (10) ◽  
pp. 1246-1251 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dhruman Goradia ◽  
Harry T. Chugani ◽  
Rajkumar Munian Govindan ◽  
Michael Behen ◽  
Csaba Juhász ◽  
...  
2017 ◽  
Vol 127 (6) ◽  
pp. 1407-1416 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margit Jehna ◽  
Juliane Becker ◽  
Karla Zaar ◽  
Gord von Campe ◽  
Kariem Mahdy Ali ◽  
...  

OBJECTIVECerebral damage in frontal, parietal, and temporal brain areas and, probably more importantly, their interconnections can lead to deficits in language. However, neural plasticity and repair allow the brain to partly compensate for neural injury, mediated by both functional and structural changes. In this study, the authors sought to systematically investigate the relationship between language performance in brain tumor patients and structural perisylvian pathways (i.e., the arcuate fasciculus [AF]) using probabilistic fiber tracking on diffusion tensor imaging. The authors used a previously proposed model in which the AF is divided into anterior, long, and posterior segments. The authors hypothesized that right-handed patients with gliomas in the language-dominant (left) hemisphere would benefit from a more symmetrical or right-lateralized language pathway in terms of better preservation of language abilities. Furthermore, they investigated to what extent specific tumor characteristics, including proximity to the AF, affect language outcome in such patients.METHODSTwenty-seven right-handed patients (12 males and 15 females; mean age 52 ± 16 years) with 11 low-grade and 16 high-grade gliomas of the left hemisphere underwent 3-T diffusion-weighted MRI (30 directions) and language assessment as part of presurgical planning. For a systematic quantitative evaluation of the AF, probabilistic fiber tracking with a 2 regions of interest approach was carried out. Volumes of the 3 segments of both hemispheric AFs were evaluated by quantifying normalized and thresholded pathways. Resulting values served to generate the laterality index of the AFs.RESULTSPatients without language deficits tended to have an AF that was symmetric or lateralized to the right, whereas patients with deficits in language significantly more often demonstrated a left-lateralized posterior segment of the AF. Patients with high-grade gliomas had more severe language deficits than those with low-grade gliomas. Backward logistic regression revealed the laterality index of the posterior AF segment and tumor grade as the only independent statistically significant predictors for language deficits in this cohort.CONCLUSIONSIn addition to the well-known fact that tumor entity influences behavioral outcome, the authors' findings suggest that the right homologs of structural language-associated pathways could be supportive for language function and facilitate compensation mechanisms after brain damage in functionally eloquent areas. This further indicates that knowledge about preoperative functional redistribution (identified by neurofunctional imaging) increases the chance for total or near-total resections of tumors in eloquent areas. In the future, longitudinal studies with larger groups are mandatory to overcome the methodological limitations of this cross-sectional study and to map neuroplastic changes associated with language performance and rehabilitation in brain tumor patients.


1996 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. E1
Author(s):  
Atsushi Koike ◽  
Hiroyuki Shimizu ◽  
Ichiro Suzuki ◽  
Buichi Ishijima ◽  
Morihiro Sugishita

It has been widely accepted that the right temporal lobe plays a major role in the processing of music. One of the main lines of evidence was derived from Milner's study, published in 1962, which reported that right temporal lobectomy led to a decline in patient scores on four of the six subtests (Tonal Memory, Timbre, Loudness, and Time subtests) of the Seashore Measures of Musical Talents. That finding had led some surgeons and patients to hesitate in choosing right temporal lobectomy as a treatment for intractable epilepsy. The authors examined performance on the Seashore Measures before and after operations in 20 patients with right temporal lobectomy and nine patients with left temporal lobectomy. No disturbances in the Seashore Measures were detected after temporal lobectomy on either side. The extent of these temporal lobectomies was smaller than that of the temporal lobectomies in Milner's study, as measured along the sylvian fissure (1.5–4 cm; mean 2.7 cm, standard deviation (SD) 0.92 cm) and the base of the temporal lobe (3.5–5.5 cm; mean 4.7 cm, SD 0.63 cm). These findings indicate that the region resected on right temporal lobectomy in the present study is not essential for basic musical processing.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Blauwblomme ◽  
Athena Demertzi ◽  
Jean-Marc Tacchela ◽  
Ludovic Fillon ◽  
Marie Bourgeois ◽  
...  

AbstractHemispherotomy is a treatment for drug-resistant epilepsy with the whole hemisphere involved in seizure onset. As recovery mechanisms are still debated, we characterize functional reorganization with multimodal MRI in two children operated on the right hemisphere (RH). We found that interhemispheric functional connectivity was abolished in both patients. The healthy left hemispheres (LH) displayed focal hyperperfusion in motor and limbic areas, and preserved network-level organization. The disconnected RHs were hypoperfused despite sustained network-level organization. Functional connectivity was increased in the left thalamo-cortical loop and between the cerebelli. The classification probability of the RH corresponding to a minimally conscious state was smaller than for the LH. We conclude that after hemispherotomy, neurological rehabilitation is sustained by cortical disinhibition and reinforcement of connectivity driven by subcortical structures in the remaining hemisphere. Our results highlight the effect of vascularization on functional connectivity and raise inquiries about the conscious state of the isolated hemisphere.


Author(s):  
Richard Wennberg ◽  
Luis Garcia Dominguez ◽  
J. Martin del Campo

AbstractA patient with intractable epilepsy, previous right frontal resection, and active vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) developed new onset quasi-continuous twitching around the left eye. Electroencephalography showed no correlate to the orbicularis oculi twitches apart from myographic potentials at the left supraorbital and anterior frontal electrodes. Magnetoencephalography was performed using spatiotemporal signal space separation to suppress magnetic artifacts associated with the VNS apparatus. Magnetoencephalographic source imaging performed on the data back-averaged from the left supraorbital myographic potentials revealed an intrasulcal cortical generator situated in the posterior wall of the right precentral gyrus representing the eye area of the motor homunculus.


Author(s):  
John Falconer ◽  
Juhn A. Wada ◽  
Wayne Martin ◽  
David Li

ABSTRACT:During the investigation of intractable epilepsy, neuronal migration anomalies [NMA] were discovered in three patients. The first patient had abnormally positioned gray matter within the walls of both lateral ventricles. The second patient had a post operative cystic area in the right parietal-occipital lobes and an area of NMA within the right temporal lobe. The third patient had abnormally thickened gray matter in the right operculum. Long term CCTV-EEG monitoring of these three patients revealed ictal discharges originating from the area of abnormal gray matter in patients 2 and 3. PET scanning showed the areas of NMA in all three patients to have similar metabolic activity to normal gray matter. These cases illustrate the value of various imaging modalities and suggest some interesting physiology of a spectrum of neuronal migration anomalies.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-4 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward C. Mader ◽  
Bruce J. Fisch ◽  
Nicole R. Villemarette-Pittman ◽  
Piotr W. Olejniczak ◽  
Michael E. Carey

Intractable epilepsy with painful partial motor seizures is a relatively rare and difficult disorder to treat. We evaluated the usefulness of botulinum toxin to reduce ictal pain. Two patients received two or four botulinum toxin (BTX) injections at one-to-two-month intervals. Patient 1 had painful seizures of the right arm and hand. Patient 2 had painful seizures involving the left foot and leg. Injections were discontinued after improved seizure control following resective surgery. Both patients received significant pain relief from the injections with analgesia lasting at least two months. Seizure severity was reduced, but seizure frequency and duration were unaffected. For these patients, BTX was effective in temporarily relieving pain associated with muscle contraction in simple partial motor seizures. Our findings do not support the hypothesis that modulation of motor end-organ feedback affects focal seizure generation. BTX is a safe and reversible treatment that should be considered as part of adjunctive therapy after failure to achieve control of painful partial motor seizures.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (03) ◽  
pp. 097-099
Author(s):  
Satyanarayana Gedela ◽  
Christian Korff

AbstractEpilepsy is one of the most common neurological disorders with almost one-third of these patients becoming intractable to medical treatments. For some of these patients, epilepsy surgery could be the best option. There are lot of disparities in caring of the epilepsy patients. There are multiple limitations in offering epilepsy surgery for the medically intractable epilepsy patients, resulting in almost 19 years gap from the diagnosis of intractable epilepsy to epilepsy surgery. These limitations range from patient or parental fear to lack of available resources. Sometimes we face an ethical issue being the limitation from doing the right thing for the patient. We want to share our experience with one of our patients with symptomatic medically intractable focal epilepsy from Rasmussen’s encephalitis who could not get the epilepsy surgery treatment because of an ethical issue.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (10) ◽  
pp. 02-10
Author(s):  
Byron Bernal ◽  
Alfredo Ardila ◽  
Monica Rosselli ◽  
Michael Duchowny ◽  
Magno R Guillen ◽  
...  

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