| Literature DB >> 28474309 |
C F Freyschlag1, J Kerschbaumer2, D Pinggera2, T Bodner3, A E Grams4, C Thomé2.
Abstract
For surgery of eloquent tumors in language areas, the accepted gold standard is functional mapping through direct cortical stimulation (DCS) in awake patients. Ever since, neuroscientists are searching for reliable noninvasive detection of function in the human brain, with variable success. The potential of diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) in combination with computational cortical parcellation to predict functional areas in language eloquent tumors has not been assessed so far. We present a proof-of-concept report involving awake surgery for a temporodorsal tumor. Postoperatively, the imaging was extensively studied and a predictive value of multimodal MR imaging for the possible extent of resection was analyzed. After resection using DCS, the extent of resection and functional outcome were correlated with the processed imaging. Preoperative imaging of our patient was taken to compute the lesion volume as a seed for tractography (DTI) and combined with a tractography of the entire hemisphere. For better spatial resolution, an elastic image fusion was performed to correct the distortion of DTI data. After subtotal resection and imaging analysis, the status of the superior part of the lesion could be identified and predicted as functional cortex. There was a strong correlation between the tumor remnant during surgery and the imaging parameters of DTI connectivity of the eloquent tissue. A combination of complex DTI processing may be able to predict function in a patient suffering eloquent brain tumors and thus allow estimation of extent of resection.Entities:
Keywords: Awake surgery; Diffusion-tensor imaging; Eloquent glioma surgery; Functional MRI; Prediction of function
Year: 2017 PMID: 28474309 PMCID: PMC5563300 DOI: 10.1007/s40708-017-0064-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Inform ISSN: 2198-4026
Fig. 13D reconstruction of fiber tracking showing the parcellated cortical areas with corresponding connection fibers. a Fibers between parcellated cortical areas. b Additional tracking of the arcuate fascicle (as a part of SLF) showing the direct connectivity to the cortex segmentated in green. (Color figure online)
Fig. 2Whole brain surface rendering showing the parcellated pathological areas divided by their connectivity to the fiber tracts. Green represents the area of direct connection of the lesion to the SLF via arcuate fascicle. (Color figure online)
Fig. 3Intraoperative photograph of the resected tumor (*), sonographic tumor boarders (X) and speech eloquence during direct cortical stimulation (numbers 1, 3 and 4). The arrow marks the area not amenable for resection