Contralesional Cortical and Network Features Associated with Preoperative Language Deficit in Glioma Patients

Author:

Zhou Chunyao,Fang Shengyu,Weng Shimeng,Zhang Zhong,Jiang Tao,Wang Yinyan,Wang Lei,Tang Kai

Abstract

Lower-grade Gliomas anchored in eloquent areas cause varying degrees of language impairment. Except for a tumor’s features, contralesional compensation may explain these differences. Therefore, studying changes in the contralateral hemisphere can provide insights into the underlying mechanisms of language function compensation in patients with gliomas. This study included 60 patients with eloquent-area or near-eloquent-area gliomas. The participants were grouped according to the degree of language defect. T1 and diffusion tensor imaging were obtained. The contralesional cortical volume and the subcortical network were compared between groups. Patients with unimpaired language function showed elevated cortical volume in the midline areas of the frontal and temporal lobes. In subcortical networks, the group also had the highest global efficiency and shortest global path length. Ten nodes had intergroup differences in nodal efficiency, among which four nodes were in the motor area and four nodes were in the language area. Linear correlation was observed between the efficiency of the two nodes and the patient’s language function score. Functional compensation in the contralesional hemisphere may alleviate language deficits in patients with gliomas. Structural compensation mainly occurs in the contralesional midline area in the frontal and temporal lobes, and manifests as an increase in cortical volume and subcortical network efficiency.

Funder

Public Welfare Development and Reform Pilot Project of Beijing Medical Research Institute

Beijing Municipal Natural Science Foundation

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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