Background: The cognitive control network (CCN) is widely considered to be a frontoparietal circuit that is involved in executive function. This study aimed to investigate the structural and functional plasticity within the CCN in unilateral frontal gliomas, which are associated with the protection of executive functions.Methods: To detect structural and functional changes within the CCN, we measured gray matter (GM) volume, regional homogeneity, the amplitude of low-frequency fluctuation (ALFF), degree centrality, and functional connectivity within the CCN in 37 patients with gliomas invading the left frontal lobe (n = 16) or the right frontal lobe (n = 21) and 40 healthy controls (CNs). Partial correlation analysis was performed to assess the association between the altered structural and functional indices and executive function.Results: When the tumor invaded the left frontal lobe, the patients showed reduced ALFF in the dorsal medial prefrontal cortex (dmPFC) within the CCN and increased ALFF in the right superior parietal cortex (rSP) within the CCN compared to the CNs. When the tumor invaded the right frontal lobe, the patients showed significantly increased GM volume and ALFF in the left superior parietal cortex (lSP) within the CCN compared to the CNs. Furthermore, the patients showed significantly increased functional connectivities between the lSP and the dmPFC and between the lSP and the rSP within the CCN compared to the CNs. Increased ALFF in the lSP within the CCN was positively correlated with executive function.Conclusions: Tumors invading the frontal lobe induced contralesional structural and functional reorganization within the posterior CCN in patients with unilateral frontal gliomas. This further suggests that the contralesional superior parietal cortex acts as a functional compensation hub within the CCN, which may protect it against the detrimental effects of tumor invasion on executive functions.
Objective This study aimed to investigate the characteristic of brain structural connections in glioma patients and further evaluate the relationship between changes in the white matter tracts and cognitive decline. Methods This retrospective study included a total of 35 subjects with glioma and 14 demographically matched healthy controls, who underwent diffusion tensor imaging scans and formal neuropsychological assessment tests. Fractional anisotropy (FA) values of white matter tracts were derived from atlas‐based analysis to compare group differences. Furthermore, subgroup‐level analysis was performed to differentiate the effects of tumor location on white matter tracts. Partial correlation analysis was used to examine the associations between neurocognitive assessments and the integrity of tracts. Region of interest‐based network analysis was performed to validate the alteration of structural brain network in subjects with glioma. Results Compared with controls, subjects with glioma exhibited reduced FA values in the right uncinate fasciculus. Besides, subjects with glioma exhibited worse performance in several cognitive assessments. Partial correlation analysis indicated that the FA value in the right superior longitudinal fasciculus temporal part was significantly positively correlated with scores of visual–spatial abilities in subjects with glioma in the right temporal lobe ( r = .932, p = .002). Region of interest‐based network analysis revealed that subjects with glioma exhibited reduced FA, fiber length (FL), and fiber number (FN) between specific brain regions compared with controls. Conclusion The present study demonstrated the reduced integrity of white matter tracts and altered structural connectivity in brain networks in patients with glioma. Notably, white matter tracts in the right hemisphere might be vulnerable to the effects of a frontal or temporal lesion and might be associated with deficient cognitive function.
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