Schwartz T H, Devinsky O, Doyle W, Perrine K
Department of Neurological Surgery, The Neurological Institute of New York, Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, New York 10032, USA.
J Neurosurg. 1998 Dec;89(6):962-70. doi: 10.3171/jns.1998.89.6.0962.
Although it is known that 5 to 10% of patients have language areas anterior to the rolandic cortex, many surgeons still perform standard anterior temporal lobectomies for epilepsy of mesial onset and report minimal long-term dysphasia. The authors examined the importance of language mapping before anterior temporal lobectomy.
The authors mapped naming, reading, and speech arrest in a series of 67 patients via stimulation of long-term implanted subdural grids before resective epilepsy surgery and correlated the presence of language areas in the anterior temporal lobe with preoperative demographic and neuropsychometric data. Naming (p < 0.03) and reading (p < 0.05) errors were more common than speech arrest in patients undergoing surgery in the anterior temporal lobe. In the approximate region of a standard anterior temporal lobectomy, including 2.5 cm of the superior temporal gyrus and 4.5 cm of both the middle and inferior temporal gyrus, the authors identified language areas in 14.5% of patients tested. Between 1.5 and 3.5 cm from the temporal tip, patients who had seizure onset before 6 years of age had more naming (p < 0.02) and reading (p < 0.01) areas than those in whom seizure onset occurred after age 6 years. Patients with a verbal intelligence quotient (IQ) lower than 90 had more naming (p < 0.05) and reading (p < 0.02) areas than those with an IQ higher than 90. Finally, patients who were either left handed or right hemisphere memory dominant had more naming (p < 0.05) and reading (p < 0.02) areas than right-handed patients with bilateral or left hemisphere memory lateralization. Postoperative neuropsychometric testing showed a trend toward a greater decline in naming ability in patients who were least likely to have anterior language areas, that is, those with higher verbal IQ and later seizure onset.
Preoperative identification of markers of left hemisphere damage, such as early seizure onset, poor verbal IQ, left handedness, and right hemisphere memory dominance should alert neurosurgeons to the possibility of encountering essential language areas in the anterior temporal lobe (1.5-3.5 cm from the temporal tip). Naming and reading tasks are required to identify these areas. Whether removal of these areas necessarily induces long-term impairment in verbal abilities is unknown; however, in patients with a low verbal IQ and early seizure onset, these areas appear to be less critical for language processing.
尽管已知5%至10%的患者语言区位于中央前回皮质前方,但许多外科医生仍对内侧型癫痫患者进行标准的前颞叶切除术,并报告长期吞咽困难的情况极少。作者研究了前颞叶切除术前语言图谱定位的重要性。
作者通过在切除性癫痫手术前刺激长期植入的硬膜下网格,对67例患者进行命名、阅读和言语停顿测试,并将颞叶前部语言区的存在与术前人口统计学和神经心理测量数据相关联。在前颞叶接受手术的患者中,命名错误(p < 0.03)和阅读错误(p < 0.05)比言语停顿更为常见。在标准前颞叶切除术的大致区域,包括颞上回2.5厘米以及颞中回和颞下回各4.5厘米,作者在14.5%的受试患者中发现了语言区。在距颞尖1.5至3.5厘米之间,6岁前发病的患者比6岁后发病的患者有更多的命名区(p < 0.02)和阅读区(p < 0.01)。言语智商(IQ)低于90的患者比IQ高于90的患者有更多的命名区(p < 0.05)和阅读区(p < 0.02)。最后,左利手或右半球记忆占优势的患者比双侧或左半球记忆侧化的右利手患者有更多的命名区(p < 0.05)和阅读区(p < 0.02)。术后神经心理测试显示,在前语言区可能性最小的患者,即那些言语智商较高且发病较晚的患者中,命名能力下降的趋势更为明显。
术前识别左半球损伤的标志物,如早期癫痫发作、言语智商低、左利手和右半球记忆占优势,应提醒神经外科医生注意在前颞叶(距颞尖1.5 - 3.5厘米)遇到重要语言区的可能性。需要通过命名和阅读任务来识别这些区域。切除这些区域是否必然导致言语能力的长期损害尚不清楚;然而,在言语智商低且癫痫发作早的患者中,这些区域对语言处理似乎不太关键。