PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Alteration of the anatomical covariance network after corpus callosotomy in pediatric intractable epilepsy.

  • Riyo Ueda,
  • Hiroshi Matsuda,
  • Noriko Sato,
  • Masaki Iwasaki,
  • Daichi Sone,
  • Eri Takeshita,
  • Yuko Shimizu-Motohashi,
  • Akihiko Ishiyama,
  • Takashi Saito,
  • Hirofumi Komaki,
  • Eiji Nakagawa,
  • Kenji Sugai,
  • Masayuki Sasaki,
  • Yoshimi Kaga,
  • Hiroshige Takeichi,
  • Masumi Inagaki

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222876
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 12
p. e0222876

Abstract

Read online

PURPOSE:This study aimed to use graph theoretical analysis of anatomical covariance derived from structural MRI to reveal how the gray matter connectivity pattern is altered after corpus callosotomy (CC). MATERIALS AND METHODS:We recruited 21 patients with epilepsy who had undergone CC. Enrollment criteria were applied: (1) no lesion identified on brain MRI; (2) no history of other brain surgery; and (3) age not younger than 3 years and not older than 18 years at preoperative MRI evaluation. The most common epilepsy syndrome was Lennox-Gastaut syndrome (11 patients). For voxel-based morphometry, the normalized gray matter images of pre-CC and post-CC patients were analyzed with SPM12 (voxel-level threshold of p<0.05 [familywise error-corrected]). Secondly, the images of both groups were subjected to graph theoretical analysis using the Graph Analysis Toolbox with SPM8. Each group was also compared with 32 age- and sex-matched control patients without brain diseases. RESULTS:Comparisons between the pre- and post-CC groups revealed a significant reduction in seizure frequency with no change in mean intelligence quotient/developmental quotient levels. There was no relationship among the three groups in global network metrics or in targeted attack. A regional comparison of betweenness centrality revealed decreased connectivity to and from the right middle cingulate gyri and medial side of the right superior frontal gyrus and a partial shift in the distribution of betweenness centrality hubs to the normal location. Significantly lower resilience to random failure was found after versus before CC and versus controls (p = 0.0450 and p = 0.0200, respectively). CONCLUSION:Graph theoretical analysis of anatomical covariance derived from structural imaging revealed two neural network effects of resection associated with seizure reduction: the reappearance of a structural network comparable to that in healthy children and reduced connectivity along the median line, including the middle cingulate gyrus.