PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

Patterns and predictors of language representation and the influence of epilepsy surgery on language reorganization in children and young adults with focal lesional epilepsy.

  • Carmen Barba,
  • Domenico Montanaro,
  • Laura Grisotto,
  • Francesca Frijia,
  • Simona Pellacani,
  • Anna Cavalli,
  • Susanna Rizzi,
  • Matteo Lenge,
  • Gayane Aghakhanyan,
  • Valentina Sibilia,
  • Flavio Giordano,
  • Tiziana Pisano,
  • Francesco Mari,
  • Federico Melani,
  • Andrea Cherubini,
  • Annamaria Buccoliero,
  • Maria Eugenia Caligiuri,
  • Renzo Guerrini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0238389
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 9
p. e0238389

Abstract

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Mapping brain functions is crucial for neurosurgical planning in patients with drug-resistant seizures. However, presurgical language mapping using either functional or structural networks can be challenging, especially in children. In fact, most of the evidence on this topic derives from cross-sectional or retrospective studies in adults submitted to anterior temporal lobectomy. In this prospective study, we used fMRI and DTI to explore patterns of language representation, their predictors and impact on cognitive performances in 29 children and young adults (mean age at surgery: 14.6 ± 4.5 years) with focal lesional epilepsy. In 20 of them, we also assessed the influence of epilepsy surgery on language lateralization. All patients were consecutively enrolled at a single epilepsy surgery center between 2009 and 2015 and assessed with preoperative structural and functional 3T brain MRI during three language tasks: Word Generation (WG), Rhyme Generation (RG) and a comprehension task. We also acquired DTI data on arcuate fasciculus in 24 patients. We first assessed patterns of language representation (relationship of activations with the epileptogenic lesion and Laterality Index (LI)) and then hypothesized a causal model to test whether selected clinical variables would influence the patterns of language representation and the ensuing impact of the latter on cognitive performances. Twenty out of 29 patients also underwent postoperative language fMRI. We analyzed possible changes of fMRI and DTI LIs and their clinical predictors. Preoperatively, we found atypical language lateralization in four patients during WG task, in one patient during RG task and in seven patients during the comprehension task. Diffuse interictal EEG abnormalities predicted a more atypical language representation on fMRI (p = 0.012), which in turn correlated with lower attention (p = 0.036) and IQ/GDQ scores (p = 0.014). Postoperative language reorganization implied shifting towards atypical language representation. Abnormal postoperative EEG (p = 0.003) and surgical failures (p = 0.015) were associated with more atypical language lateralization, in turn correlating with worsened fluency. Neither preoperative asymmetry nor postoperative DTI LI changes in the arcuate fasciculus were observed. Focal lesional epilepsy associated with diffuse EEG abnormalities may favor atypical language lateralization and worse cognitive performances, which are potentially reversible after successful surgery.