| Literature DB >> 31618749 |
Natalie L Voets1, Ivan Alvarez1, Deqiang Qiu2, Christopher Leatherday2, Jon T Willie3, Stamatios Sotiropoulos1,4, Ezequiel Gleichgerrcht5, Leonardo Bonilha5, Nigel P Pedersen6, Nadja Kadom2,7, Amit M Saindane2, Robert E Gross3, Daniel L Drane8,9,10.
Abstract
Selective laser amygdalohippocampotomy (SLAH) is a minimally invasive surgical treatment for medial temporal lobe epilepsy. Visual field deficits (VFDs) are a significant potential complication. The objective of this study was to determine the relationship between VFDs and potential mechanisms of injury to the optic radiations and lateral geniculate nucleus. We performed a retrospective cross-sectional analysis of 3 patients (5.2%) who developed persistent VFDs after SLAH within our larger series (n = 58), 15 healthy individuals and 10 SLAH patients without visual complications. Diffusion tractography was used to evaluate laser catheter penetration of the optic radiations. Using a complementary approach, we evaluated evidence for focal microstructural tissue damage within the optic radiations and lateral geniculate nucleus. Overablation and potential heat radiation were assessed by quantifying ablation and choroidal fissure CSF volumes as well as energy deposited during SLAH.SLAH treatment parameters did not distinguish VFD patients. Atypically high overlap between the laser catheter and optic radiations was found in 1/3 VFD patients and was accompanied by focal reductions in fractional anisotropy where the catheter entered the lateral occipital white matter. Surprisingly, lateral geniculate tissue diffusivity was abnormal following, but also preceding, SLAH in patients who subsequently developed a VFD (all p = 0.005).In our series, vision-related complications following SLAH, which appear to occur less frequently than following open temporal lobe -surgery, were not directly explained by SLAH treatment parameters. Instead, our data suggest that variations in lateral geniculate structure may influence susceptibility to indirect heat injury from transoccipital SLAH.Entities:
Keywords: Diffusion tensor imaging; Interstitial ablation; Laser ablation; Laser interstitial thermal therapy; Optic radiations; Temporal lobe epilepsy
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31618749 PMCID: PMC6979425 DOI: 10.1159/000502701
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stereotact Funct Neurosurg ISSN: 1011-6125 Impact factor: 1.875
Clinical and demographic data
| Age, years | Gender | Age at onset, years | Duration of epilepsy, years | Clinical MRI | Side of seizure onset/SLAH | Ablation volume, mm3 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Case A | 44 | F | 36 | 8 | Right hippocampal signal change (no atrophy) | R | 6,302 |
| Case B | 43 | M | 40 | 3 | Left MTS | L | 6,490 |
| Case C | 65 | F | 5 | 60 | Left MTS | L | 6,164 |
| 42.2±17.3 | 4 M, 6 F | 12.3 ± 9.6 | 20±19.4 | 8 MTS, 1 signal change (no atrophy), 1 normal MRI | 3 R, 7 L | 7,203±1,823 | |
| 35.7±12.4 | 2 M, 13 F | − | − | Normal | - | - | |
MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; SLAH, selective laser amygdalohippocampotomy; MTS, medial temporal sclerosis.
Fig. 1Ablation volumes and optic radiation injury load following SLAH. a Example delineation of the ablation zone on the intraoperative postgadolinium contrast scan (red mask) and laser catheter trajectory (yellow arrows). b Representative patients with and without spatial overlap between the laser catheter trajectory (yellow) and the optic radiations (blue). The ablated zone in each patient is shown in red. Views are shown from the side (top) and from behind (below) to appreciate the trajectory of the catheter relative to the optic radiations. c Total ablation volume was not larger in patients who developed a visual field deficit (VFD, n = 3) than in surgical control patients (SC, n = 9). The volume of intersection between the laser catheter trajectory and the preoperative optic radiations was substantially greater in 1 VFD patient (case C) than in SC patients (d).
Fig. 2Optic tract-based voxel-wise fractional anisotropy (FA) in patients with and without visual field deficits (VFDs). a For tract-based spatial statistics analysis, every participant's FA map was aligned to a standard template, from which a core white matter “skeleton” was created. b Voxel-wise analysis along the optic radiations identified reduced FA in all patients following selective laser amygdalahippocampotomy, both with (n = 3) and without (n = 10) visual field deficits, when compared to healthy controls (HCs, n = 15) (all p < 0.05). c One patient (case C) who developed a visual field defect showed focal FA reductions immediately adjacent to the laser catheter entry point. Other optic radiation voxels that overlapped with the laser catheter trajectory did not show reduced FA.
Fig. 3Presurgical choroidal fissure cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) volumes. a CSF volumes in the choroidal fissure prior to selective laser amygdalohippocampotomy in a patient with low (top row) and a patient with high (bottom row) ipsilateral choroidal fissure CSF volume. b Both patients (gray dots, SLAH) and healthy controls (white dots, HCs) exhibited a wide range of CSF volumes. However, both patients who developed a visual field deficit following SLAH (red triangles) showed CSF volumes within the normal range.
Fig. 4Diffusion microstructure parameters of the lateral geniculate nucleus. a Lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) region of interest masks (red) from the Jülich histological atlas. b Diffusion parameters (fractional anisotropy, radial diffusivity RD, axial diffusivity) were from the LGN in healthy controls (HCs) and patients undergoing selective laser amygdalohippocampotomy (SLAH). SLAH patients who experienced a visual field deficit (VFD) are plotted in red triangles alongside patients who did not experience a VFD (gray circles). Reduced RD differentiated VFD patients from surgical controls without visual symptoms (ipsilateral LGN F(1) = 23.47, p = 0.001) and were already present prior to SLAH.
Lateral geniculate nucleus diffusion parameters
| After ablation | Before ablation | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ipsi | contra | ipsi | contra | |||||
| RD | AD | RD | AD | RD | AD | RD | AD | |
| HC | 0.0008±0.00007 | 0.0013±0.00009 | 0.0008±0.00007 | 0.0013±0.00009 | 0.0008±0.0007 | 0.0013±0.00009 | 0.0008±0.0007 | 0.0013±0.00009 |
| SC | 0.0009±0.00012 | 0.0014±0.00011 | 0.0009±0.00019 | 0.0015±0.00016 | 0.0009±0.00013 | 0.0014±0.00013 | 0.0008±0.00017 | 0.0014±0.00014 |
| Case A | 0.0014 | 0.00054 | 0.00126 | - | - | - | - | |
| Case B | 0.0013 | 0.0014 | 0.00128 | 0.00137 | ||||
| Case C | 0.0019 | 0.00068 | 0.00043 | 0.0014 | 0.00048 | 0.0015 | ||
Lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) diffusion MRI parameters in healthy controls (HC, n = 15), surgical controls (SC, n = 10) and patients who developed visual symptoms following ablation (n = 3). Mean values and standard deviations of radial diffusivity (RD) and axial diffusivity (AD) were sampled from histologically defined (Jülich atlas) masks of the LGN. Individual visual field defect patient values greater than 2 SD from the control groups are indicated in bold font with an asterisk.