Accurate presurgical mapping of motor, speech, and language cortices, while crucial for neurosurgical planning and minimizing post-operative functional deficits, is challenging in young children with neurological disease. In such children, both invasive (cortical stimulation mapping) and non-invasive functional mapping imaging methods (MEG, fMRI) have limited success, often leading to delayed surgery or adverse post-surgical outcomes. We therefore examined the clinical utility of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) in young children who require functional mapping. In a retrospective chart review of TMS studies performed on children with refractory epilepsy or a brain tumor, at our institution, we identified 47 mapping sessions in 36 children 3 years of age or younger, in whom upper and lower extremity motor mapping was attempted; and 13 children 5–6 years old in whom language mapping, using a naming paradigm, was attempted. The primary hand motor cortex was identified in at least one hemisphere in 33 of 36 patients, and in both hemispheres in 27 children. In 17 children, primary leg motor cortex was also successfully identified. The language cortices in temporal regions were successfully mapped in 11 of 13 patients, and in six of them language cortices in frontal regions were also mapped, with most children (n = 5) showing right hemisphere dominance for expressive language. Ten children had a seizure that was consistent with their clinical semiology during or immediately following TMS, none of which required intervention or impeded completion of mapping. Using TMS, both normal motor, speech, and language developmental patterns and apparent disease induced reorganization were demonstrated in this young cohort. The successful localization of motor, speech, and language cortices in young children improved the understanding of the risk-benefit ratio prior to surgery and facilitated surgical planning aimed at preserving motor, speech, and language functions. Post-operatively, motor function was preserved or improved in nine out of 11 children who underwent surgery, as was language function in all seven children who had surgery for lesions near eloquent cortices. We provide feasibility data that TMS is a safe, reliable, and effective tool to map eloquent cortices in young children.
The plasticity of the developing brain can be observed following injury to the motor cortex and/or corticospinal tracts, the most commonly injured brain area in the pre- or peri-natal period. Factors such as timing of injury, lesion size, and lesion location may affect a single hemisphere’s ability to acquire bilateral motor representation. Bilateral motor representation of single hemisphere origin is most likely to occur if brain injury occurs before the age of 2 years; however, the link between injury etiology, reorganization type, and functional outcome is largely understudied. We performed a retrospective review to examine reorganized cortical motor maps identified through transcranial magnetic stimulation in a cohort of 52 patients. Subsequent clinical, anthropometric, and demographic information was recorded for each patient. Each patient’s primary hand motor cortex center of gravity, along with the Euclidian distance between reorganized and normally located motor cortices, was also calculated. The patients were classified into broad groups including reorganization type (inter- and intra-hemispheric motor reorganization), age at time of injury (before 2 years and after 2 years), and injury etiology (developmental disorders and acquired injuries). All measures were analyzed to find commonalities between motor reorganization type and injury etiology, function, and center of gravity distance. There was a significant effect of injury etiology on type of motor reorganization (P < 0.01), with 60.7% of patients with acquired injuries and 15.8% of patients with developmental disorders demonstrating interhemispheric motor reorganization. Within the inter-hemispheric motor reorganization group, ipsilaterally and contralaterally projecting hand motor cortex centers of gravity overlapped, indicating shared cortical motor representation. Furthermore, the data suggest significantly higher prevalence of bilateral motor representation from a single hemisphere in cases of acquired injuries compared to those of developmental origin. Functional outcome was found to be negatively affected by acquired injuries and inter-hemispheric motor reorganization relative to their respective developmental lesions and counterparts with intra-hemispheric motor reorganization. These results provide novel information regarding motor reorganization in the developing brain via an unprecedented cohort sample size and transcranial magnetic stimulation. Transcranial magnetic stimulation is uniquely suited for use in understanding the principles of motor reorganization, thereby aiding in the development of more efficacious therapeutic techniques to improve functional recovery following motor cortex injury.
BACKGROUND Presurgical mapping of eloquent cortex in young patients undergoing neurosurgery is critical but presents challenges unique to the pediatric population, including motion artifact, noncompliance, and sedation requirements. Furthermore, as bilingualism in children increases, functional mapping of more than one language is becoming increasingly critical. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), a noninvasive brain stimulation technique, is well suited to evaluate language areas in children since it does not require the patient to remain still during mapping. OBSERVATIONS A 13-year-old bilingual male with glioblastoma multiforme involving the left parietal lobe and deep occipital white matter underwent preoperative language mapping using magnetic resonance imaging-guided TMS. Language-specific cortices were successfully identified in both hemispheres. TMS findings aided in discussing with the family the risks of postsurgical deficits of tumor resection; postoperatively, the patient had intact bilingual speech and was referred for chemotherapy and radiation. LESSONS The authors’ findings add to the evolving case for preoperative dual language mapping in bilingual neurosurgical candidates. The authors illustrate the feasibility and utility of TMS as a noninvasive functional mapping tool in this child. TMS is safe, effective, and can be used for preoperative mapping of language cortex in bilingual children to aid in surgical planning and discussion with families.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.