Tractography Verified by Intraoperative Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Subcortical Stimulation During Tumor Resection Near the Corticospinal Tract

Author:

Münnich Timo1,Klein Jan2,Hattingen Elke3,Noack Anika1,Herrmann Eva4,Seifert Volker1,Senft Christian1,Forster Marie-Therese1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, Goet-he University Hospital, Frankfurt am Main, Germany

2. Fraunhofer MEVIS, Institute for Medical Image Computing, Bremen, Germany

3. Department of Neuroradiology, Goethe University Hospital, Frankfurt am Main, Germa-ny

4. Institute for Biostatistics and Math-ematical Modelling, Goethe-University Hospital, Frankfurt am Main, Germany

Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND Tractography is a popular tool for visualizing the corticospinal tract (CST). However, results may be influenced by numerous variables, eg, the selection of seeding regions of interests (ROIs) or the chosen tracking algorithm. OBJECTIVE To compare different variable sets by correlating tractography results with intraoperative subcortical stimulation of the CST, correcting intraoperative brain shift by the use of intraoperative MRI. METHODS Seeding ROIs were created by means of motor cortex segmentation, functional MRI (fMRI), and navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation (nTMS). Based on these ROIs, tractography was run for each patient using a deterministic and a probabilistic algorithm. Tractographies were processed on pre- and postoperatively acquired data. RESULTS Using a linear mixed effects statistical model, best correlation between subcortical stimulation intensity and the distance between tractography and stimulation sites was achieved by using the segmented motor cortex as seeding ROI and applying the probabilistic algorithm on preoperatively acquired imaging sequences. Tractographies based on fMRI or nTMS results differed very little, but with enlargement of positive nTMS sites the stimulation-distance correlation of nTMS-based tractography improved. CONCLUSION Our results underline that the use of tractography demands for careful interpretation of its virtual results by considering all influencing variables.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Clinical Neurology,Surgery

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