Title of article :
The insular lobe and brain plasticity: Lessons from tumor surgery
Author/Authors :
Hugues Duffau، نويسنده , , Luc Taillandier، نويسنده , , Peggy Gatignol، نويسنده , , Laurent Capelle، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
Objectives
Despite recent literature supporting the likely role of the insula in many functions, the actual participation of this multimodal lobe in the brain functioning remains unclear, i.e. has the insula an essential or compensable role?
Patients and methods
We surgically resected an insular low-grade glioma, using intraoperative electrical stimulation, in 42 patients who experienced seizures, but who presented no or only a slight neurological deficit. Surgery was performed under local anesthesia in patients with a lesion in the dominant hemisphere. The resection was systematically stopped according to cortico-subcortical functional boundaries.
Results
Intraoperative electrical mapping induced language disturbances, pain and vertigo, but no other side effects were observed. Post-operatively, the patients experienced a transient hemiparesis in 21 cases, language disorders in 10 cases, an athymhormic syndrome in 7 cases, a Foix-Chavany-Marie syndrome in 3 cases, and micturition disturbances in one case. Despite this immediate post-surgical worsening, all the patients recovered their preoperative neurological status within 3 months, except in three cases due to a deep stroke.
Conclusion
These results show that the insula, a complex associative multimodal structure poorly studied until now, can be functionally compensated. Such a plastic potential may have important fundamental and clinical implications, in particular in the field of oncological neurosurgery.
Keywords :
surgery , Plasticity , language , Sensorimotor , Brain tumor , Insula , Electrical stimulations
Journal title :
Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery
Journal title :
Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery