Interhemispheric connections in the maintenance of language performance and prognosis prediction: fully connected layer-based deep learning model analysis

Author:

Zhang Haosu1,Tehlan Kartikay1,Ille Sebastian1,Schwendner Maximilian1,Gong Zhenyu1,Schroeder Axel1,Meyer Bernhard1,Krieg Sandro M.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, Klinikum rechts der Isar, School of Medicine, Technical University of Munich, Germany

Abstract

OBJECTIVE Language-related networks have been recognized in functional maintenance, which has also been considered the mechanism of plasticity and reorganization in patients with cerebral malignant tumors. However, the role of interhemispheric connections (ICs) in language restoration remains unclear at the network level. Navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation (nTMS) and diffusion tensor imaging fiber tracking data were used to identify language-eloquent regions and their corresponding subcortical structures, respectively. METHODS Preoperative image–based IC networks and nTMS mapping data from 30 patients without preoperative and postoperative aphasia as the nonaphasia group, 30 patients with preoperative and postoperative aphasia as the glioma-induced aphasia (GIA) group, and 30 patients without preoperative aphasia but who developed aphasia after the operation as the surgery-related aphasia group were investigated using fully connected layer-based deep learning (FC-DL) analysis to weight ICs. RESULTS GIA patients had more weighted ICs than the patients in the other groups. Weighted ICs between the left precuneus and right paracentral lobule, and between the left and right cuneus, were significantly different among these three groups. The FC-DL approach for modeling functional and structural connectivity was also tested for its potential to predict postoperative language levels, and both the achieved sensitivity and specificity were greater than 70%. Weighted IC was reorganized more in GIA patients to compensate for language loss. CONCLUSIONS The authors’ method offers a new perspective to investigate brain structural organization and predict functional prognosis.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

Subject

Neurology (clinical),General Medicine,Surgery

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