| Literature DB >> 30541437 |
Leigh N Sepeta1,2, Madison M Berl3, William Davis Gaillard4,3.
Abstract
Epilepsy affects 2.2 million adults in the USA, with 1 in 26 people developing epilepsy at some point in their lives. Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is the most common form of focal epilepsy as medial structures, and the hippocampus in particular, are prone to generating seizures. Selective anterior temporal resection (which removes the hippocampus) is the most effective intractable TLE treatment, but given the critical role of the mesial temporal lobe in memory functioning, resection can have negative effects on this crucial cognitive skill. To minimize the adverse impact of temporal lobe surgery on memory functioning, reliable pre-surgical guides are needed. Clinical functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) provides reliable, noninvasive guidance of language functioning and plays a growing role in the pre-surgical evaluation for epilepsy patients; however, localization of memory function in children with epilepsy using fMRI has not been established. Aside from the lack of neuroimaging memory studies in children with TLE, studies of typical development are limited. This review will focus on the functional anatomy of memory systems throughout development, with a focus on TLE. TLE provides the ideal model from which to understand memory function and the limits of plasticity and compensation/reorganization throughout development.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30541437 PMCID: PMC6292091 DOI: 10.1186/s11689-018-9255-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurodev Disord ISSN: 1866-1947 Impact factor: 4.025
Fig. 1Results from hippocampal region of interest, comparing correct R and correct K response amplitudes (a). Event-related responses within the left hippocampal region; response amplitude for correct R trials was greater than that for correct K trials (b). Adapted with permission from Eldridge et al. [40]
Fig. 2Activation in MTL for two participants. Pattern encoding yielded right, word yielded left, and face and scene encoding yielded bilateral activation. Adapted with permission from Golby et al. [96]
fMRI memory studies for TD children
| Author/year | Population | fMRI paradigm: verbal or visual | Recall tested during scan or post scan |
|---|---|---|---|
| Menon et al. 2005 [ | 11–19 ( | Visual: scenes | Post scan |
| Ofen et al. 2007 [ | 8–24 ( | Visual: scenes | Post scan |
| Chai et al. 2010 [ | 8–24 ( | Visual: scenes (varying complexity) | Post scan |
| Ghetti et al. 2010 [ | 8, 10–11, 14, and young adults ( | Visual: drawings (incidental encoding task) | Post scan |
| Maril et al. 2010 [ | 7–19 ( | Verbal: words (incidental encoding task) | Post scan |
| Maril et al. 2011 [ | 8–11, young adults ( | Both: noun/color combinations | Post scan |
| Demaster et al. 2013 [ | 8–9, 10–11, 18–25 ( | Visual: spatial memory task | During scan |
| Demaster & Ghetti 2013 [ | 8–11, 18–25 ( | Visual: drawings | During scan |
| Sastre et al. 2016 [ | 8–9, 10–11, adults ( | Visual: item-scene pairs | During scan |
Summary of several published studies of memory fMRI for TD children in chronological order, including study population, fMRI tasks, and whether recall was tested during scanning
TD typically developing
fMRI memory studies for adults with epilepsy
| Author/year | Population | fMRI paradigm: verbal or visual | Recognition or Recall tested during scan or post scan |
|---|---|---|---|
| Detre et al. 1998 [ | 10 TLE, 8 TD | Visual: scenes | Post scan |
| Killgore et al. 1999 [ | 9 patients who underwent ATL | Visual: scenes | Post scan |
| Dupont et al. 2000 [ | 7 left MTLE (MTS), 10 TD | Verbal: supra-span list of abstract words | During scan (silently recall) and post scan |
| Jokeit et al. 2001 [ | 30 TLE, 17 TD | Visual: Roland’s Hometown Walking task | During scan |
| Golby et al. 2002 [ | 9 MTLE | Both: 4 tasks: patterns, faces, scenes, words | Post scan |
| Richardson et al. 2003 [ | 24 LMTS, 12 TD | Single words | Post scan |
| Rabin et al. 2004 [ | 35 TLE, 30 TD | Visual: scenes | Post scan |
| Janszky et al. 2005 [ | 16 MTLE | Visual: Roland’s Hometown Walking task | During scan |
| Richardson et al. 2006 [ | 30 MTLE (MTS), 13 TD | Single words (same as Richardson et al. 2003 [ | Post scan |
| Avila et al. 2006 [ | 25 with lesions in the temporal lobe, 12 TD | Visual: 2 tasks: (1) picture encoding and (2) Roland’s Hometown Walking task | (1) Picture encoding = post scan, (2) Roland’s Hometown Walking task = during scan |
| Powell et al. 2007 [ | 15 TLE | Both: 1 task with pictures, faces, words | Post scan |
| Frings et al. 2008a [ | 22 MTLE | Visual: spatial memory task (3D virtual environment) | During scan (recognition task) |
| Binder et al. 2010 [ | 30 patients who underwent LATL, 37 RATL | Visual: scenes | Post scan |
| Dupont et al. 2010 [ | 25 MTLE | Visual: pictures of objects (learned outside of scanner and fMRI 24 h later) | During scan (recognition task) |
| Bonelli et al. 2010 [ | 72 TLE, 20 TD | Both: 1 task with pictures, faces, words (same as Powell et al. 2007 [ | Post scan |
| Alessio et al. 2013 [ | 17 MTLE, 9 TD | Both: 1 task with abstract designs and abstract words | During scan (silently recall) |
| Bonelli et al. 2013 [ | 46 TLE | Both: 1 task with pictures, faces, words (same as Powell et al. 2007 [ | Post scan |
| Sidhu et al. 2013 [ | 44 MTLE, 26 TD | Both: 1 task with faces, words | Post scan |
| Sidhu et al. 2015a [ | 50 MTLE, 26 TD | Verbal: words | Post scan |
Summary of several published studies of memory fMRI for adults with epilepsy in chronological order, including study population, fMRI tasks, and whether recall was tested during scanning
TLE temporal lobe epilepsy, MTLE mesial temporal lobe epilepsy, MTS mesial temporal sclerosis, TD typically developing
aIncludes individual-level results
Fig. 3During language fMRI, the peak MTL voxel is depicted for each individual in the adult and pediatric age group (blue represents TD controls and green represents epilepsy). MTL was more left lateralized in adults than children. MTL, mesial temporal lobe. Adapted with permission from Sepeta et al. [71]