Pouratian Nader, Bookheimer Susan Y, Rex David E, Martin Neil A, Toga Arthur W
Department of Neurology, Laboratory of Neuro Imaging, UCLA School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Neurosurg Focus. 2002 Oct 15;13(4):e4.
The goal of this study was to evaluate the utility of preoperative functional magnetic resonance (fMR) imaging in the prediction of whether a given cortical area would be deemed essential for language processing by electrocortical stimulation mapping (ESM).
The authors studied patients with vascular malformations, specifically arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) and cavernous angiomas, in whom blood-flow patterns are not normal and in whom a perfusion-dependent mapping signal may be questionable. Ten patients were studied (seven harboring AVMs and three with cavernous angiomas). The authors used a battery of linguistic tasks, including visual object naming, word generation, auditory responsive naming, visual responsive naming, and sentence comprehension, to identify brain regions that were consistently activated across expression and comprehension linguistic tasks. In a comparison of ESM and fMR imaging activations, the authors varied the matching criteria (overlapping activations, adjacent activations, and deep activations) and the radii of influence of ESM (2.5, 5, and 10 mm) to determine the effects of these factors on the sensitivity and specificity of fMR imaging. The sensitivity and specificity of fMR imaging were dependent on the task, lobe, and matching criterion. For the population studied, the sensitivity and specificity of fMR imaging activations during expressive linguistic tasks were found to be up to 100 and 66.7%, respectively, in the frontal lobe, and during comprehension linguistic tasks up to 96.2 and 69.8%, respectively, in the temporal and parietal lobes. The sensitivity and specificity of each disease population (patients with AVMs and those with cavernous angiomas) and of individuals were consistent with those values reported for the entire population studied.
The authors conclude that preoperative fMR imaging is a highly sensitive preoperative planning tool for the identification of which cortical areas are essential for language and that this imaging modality may play a future role in presurgical planning for patients with vascular malformations.
本研究的目的是评估术前功能磁共振成像(fMR)在预测特定皮质区域是否会被皮质电刺激图谱(ESM)判定为语言处理所必需方面的效用。
作者研究了患有血管畸形,特别是动静脉畸形(AVM)和海绵状血管瘤的患者,这些患者的血流模式不正常,灌注依赖的图谱信号可能存在疑问。研究了10名患者(7名患有AVM,3名患有海绵状血管瘤)。作者使用了一系列语言任务,包括视觉物体命名、单词生成、听觉反应性命名、视觉反应性命名和句子理解,以识别在表达和理解语言任务中持续被激活的脑区。在比较ESM和fMR成像激活时,作者改变了匹配标准(重叠激活、相邻激活和深部激活)以及ESM的影响半径(2.5、5和10毫米),以确定这些因素对fMR成像敏感性和特异性的影响。fMR成像的敏感性和特异性取决于任务、脑叶和匹配标准。对于所研究的人群,发现在额叶进行表达性语言任务期间,fMR成像激活的敏感性和特异性分别高达100%和66.7%,在颞叶和顶叶进行理解性语言任务期间,分别高达96.2%和69.8%。每个疾病人群(患有AVM的患者和患有海绵状血管瘤的患者)以及个体的敏感性和特异性与所研究的整个人群报告的值一致。
作者得出结论,术前fMR成像是一种高度敏感的术前规划工具,可用于识别哪些皮质区域对语言至关重要,并且这种成像方式可能在血管畸形患者的术前规划中发挥未来作用。