BACKGROUND Postoperative neurological deficits may outweigh the benefit conferred by maximal resection of gliomas. We evaluated the incidence of ischemic events in patients undergoing surgery for low-grade gliomas (LGG) and the long-term neurological and cognitive sequelae. METHODS Between 2013–2017, 168 patients underwent surgical resection or biopsy for LGG at our center. A full dataset, including pre- and postoperative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and long-term clinical evaluation findings, was available for 82 patients (study group). Ischemic complications, overall and progression-free survival, and functional and neurocognitive outcomes were evaluated. RESULTS The immediate postoperative MRI revealed an acute ischemic stroke adjacent to the tumor resection cavity in 19 patients (23%), 13 of whom developed new neurological deficits due to the ischemic event. Infarcts were more common in patients with recurrent tumors, especially those involving the Sylvian fissure (p< 0.05). Surgery for insular gliomas had the strongest association with postoperative infarcts. Survival of patients w/wo a postoperative infarct was the same. The median Karnofsky-Performance Status was lower for the infarct group vs. the non-infarct group at 3 months post-surgery (p=0.016), with a gradual significant improvement for the former over one year (p=0.04). Immediately after surgery, 27% of the patients without infarcts and 58% of those with infarcts experienced a new motor deficit (p=0.037), decreasing to 16% (p=0.028) and 37% (p=0.001), respectively, at one year. Neurocognitive analysis findings before and 3 months after surgery were unchanged, but patients with an infarct had a significant decrease in naming (p=0.04). Confusion during awake craniotomy was a strong predictor of an ischemic stroke. CONCLUSIONS Intraoperative strokes are more prevalent among patients who undergo recurrent surgeries, especially in the insula. Although they do not affect survival, these strokes negatively impact the patients’ activity and performance status, especially during the first 3 postoperative months, with gradual functional improvement over one year.
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