scholarly journals Awake craniotomy with noninvasive brain mapping by 3-Tesla functional magnetic resonance imaging for excision of low-grade glioma: A case of a young patient from Pakistan

2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 471 ◽  
Author(s):  
AttaUl Aleem Bhatti ◽  
NasirKhan Jakhrani ◽  
MariaAdnan Parekh
2010 ◽  
Vol 67 (11) ◽  
pp. 941-944
Author(s):  
Olivera Sveljo ◽  
Katarina Koprivsek ◽  
Milos Lucic ◽  
Ljubodrag Minic

Introduction. New methods for studying brain functions have provided the new insights into human brain. It is really possible to study a cortical adaptation in adults who have sustained injury. We reported cortical changes in a left frontal low-grade glioma patient during disease progression and after reoperation by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Case report. The use of fMRI exams for localisation of eloquent motor and language areas were performed three times in a period of 15 months: seven years after initial tumor resection, eleven months later and three months after the reoperation. The first fMRI demonstrated cortical activation for motor tasks in the expected location of primary motor area while later examinations showed activations of both primary motor areas for right hand movement. The first exam language evaluation showed the left hemisphere dominance for both language tasks, while the second fMRI demonstrated the right hemisphere dominance for complex word generation task, but the left hemisphere remained dominant in simple language task. After the reoperation, language mapping revealed the left hemisphere dominance for both language tasks. Conclusion. fMRI evaluation of cortical changes in low-grade glioma patients may additionally optimize and individualize neurosurgical treatment.


Neurosurgery ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 52 (6) ◽  
pp. 1335-1347 ◽  
Author(s):  
Franck-Emmanuel Roux ◽  
Kader Boulanouar ◽  
Jean-Albert Lotterie ◽  
Mehdi Mejdoubi ◽  
James P. LeSage ◽  
...  

Abstract OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to analyze the usefulness of preoperative language functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), by correlating fMRI data with intraoperative cortical stimulation results for patients with brain tumors. METHODS Naming and verb generation tasks were used, separately or in combination, for 14 right-handed patients with tumors in the left hemisphere. fMRI data obtained were analyzed with SPM software, with two standard analysis thresholds (P < 0.005 and then P < 0.05). The fMRI data were then registered in a frameless stereotactic neuronavigational device and correlated with direct brain mapping results. We used a statistical model with the fMRI information as a predictor, spatially correlating each intraoperatively mapped cortical site with fMRI data integrated in the neuronavigational system (site-by-site correlation). Eight patients were also studied with language fMRI postoperatively, with the same acquisition protocol. RESULTS We observed high variability in signal extents and locations among patients with both tasks. The activated areas were located mainly in the left hemisphere in the middle and inferior frontal gyri (F2 and F3), the superior and middle temporal gyri (T1 and T2), and the supramarginal and angular gyri. A total of 426 cortical sites were tested for each task among the 14 patients. In frontal and temporoparietal areas, poor sensitivity of the fMRI technique was observed for the naming and verb generation tasks (22 and 36%, respectively) with P < 0.005 as the analysis threshold. Although not perfect, the specificity of the fMRI technique was good in all conditions (97% for the naming task and 98% for the verb generation task). Better correlation (sensitivity, 59%; specificity, 97%) was achieved by combining the two fMRI tasks. Variation of the analysis threshold to P < 0.05 increased the sensitivity to 66% while decreasing the specificity to 91%. Postoperative fMRI data (for the cortical brain areas studied intraoperatively) were in accordance with brain mapping results for six of eight patients. Complete agreement between pre- and postoperative fMRI studies and direct brain mapping results was observed for only three of eight patients. CONCLUSION With the paradigms and analysis thresholds used in this study, language fMRI data obtained with naming or verb generation tasks, before and after surgery, were imperfectly correlated with intraoperative brain mapping results. A better correlation could be obtained by combining the fMRI tasks. The overall results of this study demonstrated that language fMRI could not be used to make critical surgical decisions in the absence of direct brain mapping. Other acquisition protocols are required for evaluation of the potential role of language fMRI in the accurate detection of essential cortical language areas.


Author(s):  
SE Kosteniuk ◽  
JC Lau ◽  
JF Megyesi

Background: This study aims to evaluate the impact of pre-operative functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) on low grade glioma (LGG) patients’ outcomes. Methods: In this retrospective matched cohort study (N =48) of a single surgeon’s patients, we are comparing two groups of LGG patients (WHO grade II) based on exposure to fMRI. A 1:2 propensity score match from a pool of 764 brain tumour patients was performed. Results: Within the group of 16 LGG patients who have undergone fMRI studies over a 12-year period, mean age was 40 years, and most presented with seizures (81%). Most lesions were left-sided (81%), and the lobes most commonly involved were frontal (75%) and temporal (31%). Patients underwent either craniotomy (50%), stereotactic biopsy (25%) or nonsurgically management (25%). In surgical patients, between presurgical assessment and eight week post-surgical follow-up, mean modified Rankin scale improved from 1.80±0.79 to 1.50±0.97. In our cohort, 5-year mortality was 12.5% (patients followed for a mean duration of 5.46 years). Conclusions: Data analysis is ongoing with plans to compare relevant demographics and outcomes via 1:2 propensity score matching of LGG patients who underwent fMRI against a control cohort.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document