Study of vision‐related resting‐state activity in suprasellar tumor patients with postoperative visual damage

Author:

Wang Fuyu1ORCID,Zhou Tao1,Wang Peng1,Zhang Yanyang1,Jiang Jinli2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery The First Medical Center, Chinese PLA General Hospital Beijing China

2. Department of Neurosurgery Hainan Hospital of Chinese PLA General Hospital Sanya China

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionThe objective of this study was to investigate changes in vision‐related resting‐state activity in patients with suprasellar tumors (ST) who experienced vision deterioration after surgery.MethodsTwelve patients with ST and vision deterioration after surgery were included in the study. Resting‐state functional connectivity (FC) was compared before and after surgery using a seed‐based analysis with a priori specified regions of interest (ROIs) within the visual areas. The differences between the two groups were identified using a paired t‐test.ResultsThe data showed a decrease in FC within and between the dorsal and ventral pathways, as well as in the third pathway in ST patients. The middle temporal visual cortex (MT+) showed a decreased FC with more regions than other visual ROIs. The data also revealed an increase in FC between the visual ROIs and higher‐order cortex. The superior frontal gyrus/BA8 showed an increased FC with more ROIs than other high‐order regions, and the hOC4d was involved in an increased FC with more high‐order regions than other ROIs.ConclusionsThe study results indicate significant neural reorganization in the vision‐related cortex of ST patients with postoperative vision damage. Most subareas within the visual cortex showed remarkable neural dysfunction, and some highe‐order cortex may be primarily involved in top‐down control of the subareas within the visual cortex. The hot zones may arise in the processing of “top‐down” influence.

Publisher

Wiley

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