117 results on '"Sierpowska, J"'
Search Results
2. The Aftercare Survey: Assessment and intervention practices after brain tumor surgery in Europe
- Author
-
Sierpowska, J., Rofes, A., Dahlslatt, K., Mandonnet, E., ter Laan, M., Polczynska, M., Hamer, P.D., Halaj, M., Spena, G., Meling, T.R., Motomura, K., Reyes, A.F., Campos, A.R., Robe, P.A., Zigiotto, L., Sarubbo, S., Freyschlag, C.F., Broen, M.P.G., Stranjalis, G., Papadopoulos, K., Liouta, E., Rutten, G.J., Viegas, C.P., Silvestre, A., Perrote, F., Brochero, N., Caceres, C., Zdun-Ryzewska, G., Kloc, W., Satoer, D., Dragoy, O., Hendriks, M.P.H., Alvarez-Carriles, J.C., Piai, V., Zdun-Ryzewska, A., Neurolinguistics and Language Development (NLD), RS: GROW - R3 - Innovative Cancer Diagnostics & Therapy, Klinische Neurowetenschappen, and MUMC+: MA Med Staf Spec Neurologie (9)
- Subjects
REHABILITATION ,caregivers ,RETURN ,Neurodevelopmental disorders Donders Center for Medical Neuroscience [Radboudumc 7] ,Neuro- en revalidatiepsychologie ,DISORDERS ,Neuropsychology and rehabilitation psychology ,COST ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,glioma aftercare ,TIME ,Reconstructive and regenerative medicine Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 10] ,Language in Interaction ,All institutes and research themes of the Radboud University Medical Center ,quality of life ,HIGH-GRADE GLIOMA ,survey ,postsurgical outcomes - Abstract
Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research [024.001.006]; National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, USA [K01DC016904]; Center for Language and Brain NRU Higher School of Economics, RF Government [14.641.31.0004], Sierpowska, J., Rofes, A., Dahlslätt, K., Mandonnet, E., Ter Laan, M., Połczyńska, M., Hamer, P.D.W., Halaj, M., Spena, G., Meling, T.R., Motomura, K., Reyes, A.F., Campos, A.R., Robe, P.A., Zigiotto, L., Sarubbo, S., Freyschlag, C.F., Broen, M.P.G., Stranjalis, G., Papadopoulos, K., Liouta, E., Rutten, G.-J., Viegas, C.P., Silvestre, A., Perrote, F., Brochero, N., Cáceres, C., Zdun-Ryżewska, A., Kloc, W., Satoer, D., Dragoy, O., Hendriks, M.P.H., Alvarez-Carriles, J.C., Piai, V.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Inferior fronto-occipital fascicle displacement in temporoinsular gliomas using diffusion tensor imaging
- Author
-
Camins, A., Naval-Baudin, P., Majós, C., Sierpowska, J., Sanmillan, J.L., Cos, M., Rodriguez-Fornells, A., Gabarrós, A., Camins, A., Naval-Baudin, P., Majós, C., Sierpowska, J., Sanmillan, J.L., Cos, M., Rodriguez-Fornells, A., and Gabarrós, A.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 248752.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access), Background and Purpose: Brain tumors can result in displacement or destruction of important white matter tracts such as the inferior fronto-occipital fascicle (IFOF). Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) can assess the extent of this effect and potentially provide neurosurgeons with an accurate map to guide tumor resection; analyze IFOF displacement patterns in temporoinsular gliomas based on tumor grading and topography in the temporal lobe; and assess whether these patterns follow a predictable pattern, to assist in maximal tumor resection while preserving IFOF function. Methods: Thirty-four patients with temporal gliomas and available presurgical MRI were recruited. Twenty-two had insula infiltration. DTI deterministic region of interest (ROI)-based tractography was performed using commercial software. Tumor topographic imaging characteristics analyzed were as follows: location in the temporal lobe and extent of extratemporal involvement. Qualitative tractographic data obtained from directional DTI color maps included type of involvement (displaced/edematous-infiltrated/destroyed) and displacement direction. Quantitative tractographic data of ipsi- and contralateral IFOF included whole tract volume, fractional anisotropy, and fractional anisotropy of a 2-dimensional coronal ROI on the tract at the point of maximum tumor involvement. Results: The most common tract involvement pattern was edematous/infiltrative displacement. Displacement patterns depended on main tumor location in the temporal lobe and presence of insular involvement. All tumors showed superior displacement pattern. In lateral tumors, displacement tendency was medial. In medial tumors, displacement tendency was lateral. When we add insular involvement, the tendency was more medial displacement. A qualitative and quantitative assessment supported these results. Conclusions: IFOF displacement patterns are reproducible and suitable for temporoinsular gliomas presurgical planning.
- Published
- 2022
4. Time-course of right-hemisphere recruitment during word production following left-hemisphere damage: A single case of young stroke
- Author
-
Chupina, I., Sierpowska, J., Zheng, X., Dewenter, A.F., Piastra, M.C., Piai, V., Chupina, I., Sierpowska, J., Zheng, X., Dewenter, A.F., Piastra, M.C., and Piai, V.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 253004.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access), Our understanding of post-stroke language function is largely based on older age groups, who show increasing age-related brain pathology and neural reorganisation. To illustrate language outcomes in the young-adult brain, we present the case of J., a 23 y.o. woman with chronic aphasia from a left-hemisphere stroke affecting the temporal lobe. Diffusion MRI-based tractography indicated that J.'s language-relevant white matter structures were severely damaged. Employing magnetoencephalography (MEG), we explored J.'s conceptual preparation and word planning abilities using context-driven and bare picture-naming tasks. These revealed naming deficits, manifesting as word-finding difficulties and semantic paraphasias about half of the time. Naming was however facilitated by semantically constraining lead-in sentences. Altogether, this pattern indicates disrupted lexical-semantic and phonological retrieval abilities. MEG revealed that J.'s conceptual and naming-related neural responses were supported by the right hemisphere, compared to the typical left-lateralised brain response of a matched control. Differential recruitment of right-hemisphere structures (330-440 ms post-picture onset) was found concurrently during successful naming (right mid-to-posterior temporal lobe) and word-finding attempts (right inferior frontal gyrus). Disconnection of the temporal lobes via corpus callosum was not critical for recruitment of the right hemisphere in visually-guided naming, possibly due to neural activity right-lateralising from the outset. Although J.'s right hemisphere responded in a timely manner during word planning, its lexical and phonological retrieval abilities remained modest.
- Published
- 2022
5. Comparing human and chimpanzee temporal lobe neuroanatomy reveals modifications to human language hubs beyond the frontotemporal arcuate fasciculus
- Author
-
Sierpowska, J., Bryant, K.L., Janssen, N., Blazquez Freches, G., Römkens, M., Mangnus, M., Mars, R.B., Piai, V., Sierpowska, J., Bryant, K.L., Janssen, N., Blazquez Freches, G., Römkens, M., Mangnus, M., Mars, R.B., and Piai, V.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, Communication through language is a great achievement of evolution. In humans, the arcuate fasciculus, white matter that extended dramatically during evolution, is known to subserve language. We investigated whether connections through critical language centers in the temporal lobe are uniquely human. We show that connectivity in the posterior temporal lobe via the arcuate fasciculus expanded bilaterally to frontal and parietal cortices in humans compared with chimpanzees. Concomitantly, the ventral tracts connect more strongly to posterior temporal regions in the chimpanzees than in humans. In the anterior temporal lobe, connections shared between both species and uniquely human expansions are present. Changes to human language streams extend beyond the arcuate fasciculus, including a suite of expansions to connectivity within the temporal lobes. The biological foundation for the language-ready brain in the human lineage remains a debated subject. In humans, the arcuate fasciculus (AF) white matter and the posterior portions of the middle temporal gyrus are crucial for language. Compared with other primates, the human AF has been shown to dramatically extend into the posterior temporal lobe, which forms the basis of a number of models of the structural connectivity basis of language. Recent advances in both language research and comparative neuroimaging invite a reassessment of the anatomical differences in language streams between humans and our closest relatives. Here, we show that posterior temporal connectivity via the AF in humans compared with chimpanzees is expanded in terms of its connectivity not just to the ventral frontal cortex but also to the parietal cortex. At the same time, posterior temporal regions connect more strongly to the ventral white matter in chimpanzees as opposed to humans. This pattern is present in both brain hemispheres. Additionally, we show that the anterior temporal lobe harbors a combination of connections present in both species
- Published
- 2022
6. Inner speech brain mapping: Is it possible to map what we cannot observe?
- Author
-
Rodriguez-Fornells, A., León-Cabrera, P., Gabarros, A., Sierpowska, J., Mandonnet, E., Herbet, G., Mandonnet, E., and Herbet, G.
- Subjects
Cognitive science ,Neural correlates of consciousness ,Neuro- en revalidatiepsychologie ,Working memory ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Neuropsychology and rehabilitation psychology ,Cognition ,Brain mapping ,Mental life ,Language in Interaction ,Clinical work ,Phenomenon ,Function (engineering) ,Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext Inner speech (IS), or the ability to speak silently in our heads, is an important function in our rich mental life that lies at the crossroad of other cognitive domains such as language, thinking, and working memory as well as self-reflective and self-regulatory functions. An outstanding question is how to measure IS, as this phenomenon is not easily observable, and posits an important challenge to research and clinical work especially during awake brain intraoperative monitoring. Here we review theoretical and methodological approaches to IS, highlight its neural underpinnings, and propose several ideas to address the challenge of measuring IS during awake brain surgery.
- Published
- 2021
7. Leczenie operacyjne guzów w elokwentnych obszarach mózgu [Surgical treatment of tumors in eloquent areas of the brain]
- Author
-
Kloc, W., Sierpowska, J., Zdun-Ryzewska, A., Izycka-Swieszewska, E., Sebastyanska-Targowska, I., Maksymowicz, S., Libionka, W., Bartosinska, A., Tarkowski, Z., and Tarkowski, Z.
- Subjects
Neuro- en revalidatiepsychologie ,Neuropsychology and rehabilitation psychology - Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext
- Published
- 2021
8. Inner speech brain mapping: Is it possible to map what we cannot observe?
- Author
-
Mandonnet, E., Herbet, G., Rodriguez-Fornells, A., León-Cabrera, P., Gabarros, A., Sierpowska, J., Mandonnet, E., Herbet, G., Rodriguez-Fornells, A., León-Cabrera, P., Gabarros, A., and Sierpowska, J.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, Inner speech (IS), or the ability to speak silently in our heads, is an important function in our rich mental life that lies at the crossroad of other cognitive domains such as language, thinking, and working memory as well as self-reflective and self-regulatory functions. An outstanding question is how to measure IS, as this phenomenon is not easily observable, and posits an important challenge to research and clinical work especially during awake brain intraoperative monitoring. Here we review theoretical and methodological approaches to IS, highlight its neural underpinnings, and propose several ideas to address the challenge of measuring IS during awake brain surgery.
- Published
- 2021
9. Behavioural and neurophysiological signatures in the retrieval of individual memories of recent and remote real-life routine episodic events
- Author
-
Nicolás, B., Wu, X., García-Arch, J., Dimiccoli, M., Sierpowska, J., Saiz-Masvidal, C., Soriano-Mas, C., Radeva, P., Fuentemilla, L., Nicolás, B., Wu, X., García-Arch, J., Dimiccoli, M., Sierpowska, J., Saiz-Masvidal, C., Soriano-Mas, C., Radeva, P., and Fuentemilla, L.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 233427.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access), Autobiographical memory (AM) has been largely investigated as the ability to recollect specific events that belong to an individual's past. However, how we retrieve real-life routine episodes and how the retrieval of these episodes changes with the passage of time remain unclear. Here, we asked participants to use a wearable camera that automatically captured pictures to record instances during a week of their routine life and implemented a deep neural network-based algorithm to identify picture sequences that represented episodic events. We then asked each participant to return to the lab to retrieve AMs for single episodes cued by the selected pictures 1 week, 2 weeks and 6 to 14 months after encoding while scalp electroencephalographic (EEG) activity was recorded. We found that participants were more accurate in recognizing pictured scenes depicting their own past than pictured scenes encoded in the lab, and that memory recollection of personally experienced events rapidly decreased with the passing of time. We also found that the retrieval of real-life picture cues elicited a strong and positive 'ERP old/new effect' over frontal regions and that the magnitude of this ERP effect was similar throughout memory tests over time. However, we observed that recognition memory induced a frontal theta power decrease and that this effect was mostly seen when memories were tested after 1 and 2 weeks but not after 6 to 14 months from encoding. Altogether, we discuss the implications for neuroscientific accounts of episodic retrieval and the potential benefits of developing individual-based AM exploration strategies at the clinical level.
- Published
- 2021
10. Leczenie operacyjne guzów w elokwentnych obszarach mózgu [Surgical treatment of tumors in eloquent areas of the brain]
- Author
-
Tarkowski, Z., Kloc, W., Sierpowska, J., Zdun-Ryzewska, A., Izycka-Swieszewska, E., Sebastyanska-Targowska, I., Maksymowicz, S., Libionka, W., Bartosinska, A., Tarkowski, Z., Kloc, W., Sierpowska, J., Zdun-Ryzewska, A., Izycka-Swieszewska, E., Sebastyanska-Targowska, I., Maksymowicz, S., Libionka, W., and Bartosinska, A.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext
- Published
- 2021
11. White matter hyperintensities at critical crossroads for executive function and verbal abilities in small vessel disease
- Author
-
Camerino, I.L., Sierpowska, J., Reid, A.T., Meyer, N.H., Tuladhar, A.M., Kessels, R.P.C., Leeuw, F.E. de, Piai, V., Camerino, I.L., Sierpowska, J., Reid, A.T., Meyer, N.H., Tuladhar, A.M., Kessels, R.P.C., Leeuw, F.E. de, and Piai, V.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 226545.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access), The presence of white matter lesions in patients with cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) is among the main causes of cognitive decline. We investigated the relation between white matter hyperintensity (WMH) locations and executive and language abilities in 442 SVD patients without dementia with varying burden of WMH. We used Stroop Word Reading, Stroop Color Naming, Stroop Color-Word Naming, and Category Fluency as language measures with varying degrees of executive demands. The Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT) was used as a control task, as it measures processing speed without requiring language use or verbal output. A voxel-based lesion–symptom mapping (VLSM) approach was used, corrected for age, sex, education, and lesion volume. VLSM analyses revealed statistically significant clusters for tests requiring language use, but not for SDMT. Worse scores on all tests were associated with WMH in forceps minor, thalamic radiations and caudate nuclei. In conclusion, an association was found between WMH in a core frontostriatal network and executive-verbal abilities in SVD, independent of lesion volume and processing speed. This circuitry underlying executive-language functioning might be of potential clinical importance for elderly with SVD. More detailed language testing is required in future research to elucidate the nature of language production difficulties in SVD.
- Published
- 2021
12. Effect of human trabecular bone composition on its electrical properties
- Author
-
Sierpowska, J., Lammi, M.J., Hakulinen, M.A., Jurvelin, J.S., Lappalainen, R., and Töyräs, J.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The black box of global aphasia: Neuroanatomical underpinnings of remission from acute global aphasia with preserved inner language function
- Author
-
Sierpowska, J., Leon Cabrera, P., Camins, A., Juncadella, M., Gabarrós, A., Rodríguez-Fornells, A., Sierpowska, J., Leon Cabrera, P., Camins, A., Juncadella, M., Gabarrós, A., and Rodríguez-Fornells, A.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 220228.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access), Objective; We studied an unusual case of global aphasia (GA) occurring after brain tumor removal and remitting one-month after surgery. After recovering, the patient reported on her experience during the episode, which suggested a partial preservation of language abilities (such as semantic processing) and the presence of inner speech (IS) despite a failure in overt speech production. Thus, we explored the role of IS and preserved language functions in the acute phase and investigated the neuroanatomical underpinnings of this severe breakdown in language processing. Method: A neuropsychological and language assessment tapping into language production, comprehension, attention and working memory was carried out both before and three months after surgery. In the acute stage a simplified protocol was tailored to assess the limited language abilities and further explore patient’s performance on different semantic tasks. The neuroanatomical dimension of these abrupt changes was provided by perioperative structural neuroimaging. Results: Language and neuropsychological performance were normal/close to normal both before and three months after surgery. In the acute stage, the patient presented severe difficulties with comprehension, production and repetition, whereas she was able to correctly perform tasks that requested conceptual analysis and non-verbal operations. After recovering, the patient reported that she had been able to internally formulate her thoughts despite her overt phonological errors during the episode. Structural neuroimaging revealed that an extra-axial blood collection affected the middle frontal areas during the acute stage and that the white matter circuitry was left-lateralized before surgery. Conclusions: We deemed that the global aphasia episode was produced by a combination of the post-operative extra-axial blood collection directly impacting left middle frontal areas and a left-lateralization of the arcuate and/or uncinated fasciculi before surg
- Published
- 2020
14. How the speed of word finding depends on ventral tract integrity in primary progressive aphasia
- Author
-
Janssen, N., Roelofs, A.P.A., Mangnus, M., Sierpowska, J., Kessels, R.P.C., Piai, V., Janssen, N., Roelofs, A.P.A., Mangnus, M., Sierpowska, J., Kessels, R.P.C., and Piai, V.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 224764.pdf (preprint version ) (Open Access), Primary progressive aphasia (PPA) is a clinical neurodegenerative syndrome with word finding problems as a core clinical symptom. Many aspects of word finding have been clarified in psycholinguistics using picture naming and a picture-word interference (PWI) paradigm, which emulates naming under contextual noise. However, little is known about how word finding depends on white-matter tract integrity, in particular, the atrophy of tracts located ventrally to the Sylvian fissure. To elucidate this question, we examined word finding in individuals with PPA and healthy controls employing PWI, tractography, and computer simulations using the WEAVER++ model of word finding. Twenty-three individuals with PPA and twenty healthy controls named pictures in two noise conditions. Mixed-effects modelling was performed on naming accuracy and reaction time (RT) and fixel-based tractography analyses were conducted to assess the relation between ventral white-matter integrity and naming performance. Naming RTs were longer for individuals with PPA compared to controls and, critically, individuals with PPA showed a larger noise effect compared to controls. Moreover, this difference in noise effect was differentially related to tract integrity. Whereas the noise effect did not depend much on tract integrity in controls, a lower tract integrity was related to a smaller noise effect in individuals with PPA. Computer simulations supported an explanation of this paradoxical finding in terms of reduced propagation of noise when tract integrity is low. By using multimodal analyses, our study indicates the significance of the ventral pathway for naming and the importance of RT measurement in the clinical assessment of PPA.
- Published
- 2020
15. Autobiographical memory in epileptic patients after temporal lobe resection or bitemporal hippocampal sclerosis
- Author
-
Miró, J., Ripollés, P., Sierpowska, J., Santurino, M., Juncadella, M., Falip, M., Rodríguez-Fornells, A., Miró, J., Ripollés, P., Sierpowska, J., Santurino, M., Juncadella, M., Falip, M., and Rodríguez-Fornells, A.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 219449.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access), The human hippocampus is believed to be a crucial node in the neural network supporting autobiographical memory retrieval. Structural mesial temporal damage associated with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) provides an opportunity to systematically investigate and better understand the local and distal functional consequences of mesial temporal damage in the engagement of the autobiographical memory network. We examined 19 TLE patients (49.21 ± 11.55 years; 12 females) with unilateral mesial TLE (MTLE; 12 with anterior temporal lobe resection: 6 right MTLE, 6 left MTLE) or bilateral mesial TLE (7 BMTLE) and 18 matched healthy subjects. We used functional MRI (fMRI) with an adapted autobiographical memory paradigm and a specific neuropsychological test (Autobiographical Memory Interview, AMI). While engaged in the fMRI autobiographical memory paradigm, all groups activated a large fronto-temporo-parietal network. However, while this network was left lateralized for healthy participants and right MTLE patients, left MTLE and patients with BMTLE also showed strong activation in right temporal and frontal regions. Moreover, BMTLE and left MTLE patients also showed significant mild deficits in episodic autobiographical memory performance measured with the AMI test. The right temporal and extra-temporal fMRI activation, along with the impairment in autobiographical memory retrieval found in left MTLE and BMTLE patients suggest that alternate brain areas - other than the hippocampus - may also support this process, possibly due to neuroplastic effects.
- Published
- 2020
16. Language neuroplasticity in brain tumor patients revealed by magnetoencephalography
- Author
-
Piai, V., Witte, E. de, Sierpowska, J., Zheng, X., Hinkley, L.B., Mizuiri, D., Knight, R.T., Berger, M.S., Nagarajan, S., Piai, V., Witte, E. de, Sierpowska, J., Zheng, X., Hinkley, L.B., Mizuiri, D., Knight, R.T., Berger, M.S., and Nagarajan, S.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 219587.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access), Little is known about language impairment in brain tumor patients, especially in the presurgical phase. Impairment in this population may be missed because standardized tests fail to capture mild deficits. Additionally, neuroplasticity may also contribute to minimizing language impairments. We examined 14 presurgical patients with brain tumors in the language-dominant hemisphere using magnetoencephalography (MEG) while they performed a demanding picture-word interference task, that is, participants name pictures while ignoring distractor words. Brain tumor patients had behavioral picture-naming effects typically observed in healthy controls. The MEG responses also showed the expected pattern in its timing and amplitude modulation typical of controls, but with an altered spatial distribution of right hemisphere sources, in contrast to the classic left hemisphere source found in healthy individuals. This finding supports tumor-induced neural reorganization of language before surgery. Crucially, the use of electrophysiology allowed us to show the "same" neuronal response in terms of its timing and amplitude modulation in the right hemisphere, supporting the hypothesis that the processes performed by the right hemisphere following reorganization are similar in nature to those (previously) performed by the left hemisphere. We also identified one participant with a fast-growing tumor affecting large parts of critical language areas and underlying ventral and dorsal white matter tracts who showed a deviant pattern in behavior and in the MEG event-related responses. In conclusion, our results attest to the validity of using a demanding picture-naming task in presurgical patients and provide evidence for neuroplasticity, with the right hemisphere performing similar computations as the left hemisphere typically performs.
- Published
- 2020
17. Right structural and functional reorganization in four-year-old children with perinatal arterial ischemic stroke predict language production
- Author
-
François, C., Ripollés, P., Ferreri, L., Muchart, J., Sierpowska, J., Carme Fons, M., Solé, J., Rebollo, M., Zatorre, R.J., Garcia-Alix, A., Bosch, L., Rodriguez-Fornells, A., François, C., Ripollés, P., Ferreri, L., Muchart, J., Sierpowska, J., Carme Fons, M., Solé, J., Rebollo, M., Zatorre, R.J., Garcia-Alix, A., Bosch, L., and Rodriguez-Fornells, A.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 207577.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access), Brain imaging methods have contributed to shed light on the mechanisms of recovery after early brain insult. The assumption that the unaffected right hemisphere can take over language functions after left perinatal stroke is still under debate. Here, we report how patterns of brain structural and functional reorganization were associated with language outcomes in a group of four-year-old children with left perinatal arterial ischemic stroke (PAIS). Specifically, we gathered specific fine-grained developmental measures of receptive and productive aspects of language as well as standardized measures of cognitive development. We also collected structural neuroimaging data as well as functional activations during a passive listening story-telling fMRI task and a resting state session (rs-fMRI). Children with a left perinatal stroke showed larger lateralization indices of both structural and functional connectivity of the dorsal language pathway towards the right hemisphere that, in turn, were associated with better language outcomes. Importantly, the pattern of structural asymmetry was significantly more right-lateralized in children with a left perinatal brain insult than in a group of matched healthy controls. These results strongly suggest that early lesions of the left dorsal pathway and the associated perisylvian regions can induce the interhemispheric transfer of language functions to right homolog regions. This study provides combined evidence of structural and functional brain reorganization of language networks after early stroke with strong implications for neurobiological models of language development.
- Published
- 2019
18. White-matter pathways and semantic processing: Intrasurgical and lesion-symptom mapping evidence
- Author
-
Sierpowska, J., Gabarrós, A., Fernandez-Coello, A., Camins, A., Castañer, S., Juncadella, M., François, C., Rodríguez-Fornells, A., Sierpowska, J., Gabarrós, A., Fernandez-Coello, A., Camins, A., Castañer, S., Juncadella, M., François, C., and Rodríguez-Fornells, A.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 201066.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access), In the present study, we aimed to test the association between the correct function of the left ventral white matter pathways and semantic processing (dual stream models for language processing, Hickok & Poeppel, 2004), using a new set of language tasks during intraoperative electrical stimulation at white matter level. Additionally, we evaluated brain regions needed for correct performance on the different semantic tasks using lesion-symptom analyses (voxel lesion-symptom mapping and track-wise lesion analysis) in a sample of 62 candidates for the awake brain surgery. We found that electrical stimulation in the vicinity of the inferior longitudinal and inferior fronto-occipital fasciculi disturbed performance on semantic processing tasks. Individuals presented with significantly more semantic paraphasias during brain tumor resection than during the electrical stimulation at the cortex level. Track-wise analyses confirmed the role of these left ventral pathways in semantic processing: a significant relationship was observed between the probability of inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus disconnection/damage and the semantic matching tasks, as well as the number of semantic paraphasias in naming. Importantly, the same analyses for the total score of the Boston Naming Test confirmed significant relationships between this test score and the integrity of the inferior fronto-occipital, inferior longitudinal and uncinate fasciculi. This was further supported by the results of VLSM analyses showing a significant relationship between BNT and the presence of lesion within left middle and inferior temporal gyri. The present findings provide new intraoperative evidence for the role of the white-matter ventral pathways in semantic processing, while at the same time emphasizing the need to include a broader assessment of semantic-conceptual aspects during the awake neurosurgical intervention. This approach will ensure better preservation of functional tissue in the tumoral vicin
- Published
- 2019
19. White matter cortico-striatal tracts predict apathy subtypes in Huntington's disease
- Author
-
De Paepe, A.E., Sierpowska, J., Garcia-Gorro, C.G., Martinez-Horta, S., Perez-Perez, J., Kulisevsky, J., Rodriguez-Dechicha, N., Vaquer, I., Subira, S., Calopa, M., Muñoz, E., Santacruz, P., Ruiz-Idiago, J., Mareca, C., De Diego-Balaguer, R., Camara, E., De Paepe, A.E., Sierpowska, J., Garcia-Gorro, C.G., Martinez-Horta, S., Perez-Perez, J., Kulisevsky, J., Rodriguez-Dechicha, N., Vaquer, I., Subira, S., Calopa, M., Muñoz, E., Santacruz, P., Ruiz-Idiago, J., Mareca, C., De Diego-Balaguer, R., and Camara, E.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 214204.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access), Background: Apathy is the neuropsychiatric syndrome that correlates most highly with Huntington's disease progression, and, like early patterns of neurodegeneration, is associated with lesions to cortico-striatal connections. However, due to its multidimensional nature and elusive etiology, treatment options are limited. Objectives: To disentangle underlying white matter microstructural correlates across the apathy spectrum in Huntington's disease. Methods Forty-six Huntington's disease individuals (premanifest (N = 22) and manifest (N = 24)) and 35 healthy controls were scanned at 3-tesla and underwent apathy evaluation using the short-Problem Behavior Assessment and short-Lille Apathy Rating Scale, with the latter being characterized into three apathy domains, namely emotional, cognitive, and auto-activation deficit. Diffusion tensor imaging was used to study whether individual differences in specific cortico-striatal tracts predicted global apathy and its subdomains. Results: We elucidate that apathy profiles may develop along differential timelines, with the auto-activation deficit domain manifesting prior to motor onset. Furthermore, diffusion tensor imaging revealed that inter-individual variability in the disruption of discrete cortico-striatal tracts might explain the heterogeneous severity of apathy profiles. Specifically, higher levels of auto-activation deficit symptoms significantly correlated with increased mean diffusivity in the right uncinate fasciculus. Conversely, those with severe cognitive apathy demonstrated increased mean diffusivity in the right frontostriatal tract and left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex to caudate nucleus tract. Conclusions: The current study provides evidence that white matter correlates associated with emotional, cognitive, and auto-activation subtypes may elucidate the heterogeneous nature of apathy in Huntington's disease, as such opening a door for individualized pharmacological management of apathy as a multidimensiona
- Published
- 2019
20. Music-supported therapy in the rehabilitation of subacute stroke patients: A randomized controlled trial
- Author
-
Grau-Sánchez, J., Duarte, E., Ramos-Escobar, N., Sierpowska, J., Rueda, N., Redón, S., Veciana de las Heras, M., Pedro, J., Särkämö, T., and Rodríguez-Fornells, A.
- Subjects
030506 rehabilitation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Neuro- en revalidatiepsychologie ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neuropsychology and rehabilitation psychology ,Rehabilitation ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Plasticity and Memory [DI-BCB_DCC_Theme 3] ,0305 other medical science ,human activities ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,humanities - Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext Introduction/Background: Music-supported therapy (MST) has been developed as a tool in neurorehabilitation to restore hemiparesis of the upper extremity after a stroke based on the ability of music training to promote brain plasticity. However, the effects of MST have not been appropriately contrasted with conventional therapy. The aim of this trial was to test the effectiveness of adding MST to a standard rehabilitation program in subacute stroke patients. Material and method: A two-arm, parallel-group controlled trial was conducted where 40 patients in the first 6 months from the stroke onset were randomly allocated to conventional treatment (CT-group, n=20) or MST treatment (MST-group, n=20) in addition to the rehabilitation program. Before and after 4 weeks of treatment, patients were evaluated on four domains: motor functions, cognitive functions, mood and quality of life, and brain plasticity assessed with functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI). A follow-up at 3 months was conducted to examine the evolution of the motor gains. Results: Both groups significantly improved their motor function, and no differences between groups were found. The only difference between groups was observed in the language domain for quality of life. Importantly, an association was encountered between the capacity to experience pleasure from music activities and the motor improvement in the MST-group. A pattern of intrahemispheric reorganization in motor-related areas was observed in both groups, being more prominent in the MST-group. Conclusion: MST as an add-on treatment showed no superiority to conventional therapies for motor recovery with a similar pattern of plastic changes. Importantly, patient's intrinsic motivation to engage in musical activities was associated to better motor improvement. Trial registration NCT02208219. 1 p.
- Published
- 2018
21. Disentangling apathy subtypes in Huntington's disease: A white matter biomarker of disease profile and progression
- Author
-
De Paepe, A.E., Sierpowska, J., Garcia-Gorro, C.G., Martinez-Horta, S., Perez-Perez, J., Kulisevsky, J., Rodriguez-Dechicha, N., Vaquer, I., Subira, S., Calopa, M., Muñoz, E., Santacruz, P., Ruiz-Idiago, J., Mareca, C., De Diego-Balaguer, R., and Camara, E.
- Subjects
Neuro- en revalidatiepsychologie ,Neuropsychology and rehabilitation psychology ,Plasticity and Memory [DI-BCB_DCC_Theme 3] - Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext 2 p.
- Published
- 2018
22. Imaging practice in low-grade gliomas among European specialized centers and proposal for a minimum core of imaging
- Author
-
Freyschlag, C.F., Krieg, S.M., Kerschbaumer, J., Pinggera, D., Forster, M.T., Cordier, D., Rossi, M., Miceli, G., Roux, A., Reyes, A., Sarubbo, S., Smits, A., Sierpowska, J., Robe, P.A., Rutten, G.J., Santarius, T., Matys, T., Zanello, M., Almairac, F., Mondot, L., Jakola, A.S., Zetterling, M., Rofes, A., Campe, G. von, Guillevin, R., Bagatto, D., Lubrano, V., Rapp, M., Goodden, J., Witt Hamer, P.C. de, Pallud, J., Bello, L., Thomé, C., Duffau, H., Mandonnet, E., Freyschlag, C.F., Krieg, S.M., Kerschbaumer, J., Pinggera, D., Forster, M.T., Cordier, D., Rossi, M., Miceli, G., Roux, A., Reyes, A., Sarubbo, S., Smits, A., Sierpowska, J., Robe, P.A., Rutten, G.J., Santarius, T., Matys, T., Zanello, M., Almairac, F., Mondot, L., Jakola, A.S., Zetterling, M., Rofes, A., Campe, G. von, Guillevin, R., Bagatto, D., Lubrano, V., Rapp, M., Goodden, J., Witt Hamer, P.C. de, Pallud, J., Bello, L., Thomé, C., Duffau, H., and Mandonnet, E.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 195164.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access), Objective: Imaging studies in diffuse low-grade gliomas (DLGG) vary across centers. In order to establish a minimal core of imaging necessary for further investigations and clinical trials in the field of DLGG, we aimed to establish the status quo within specialized European centers. Methods: An online survey composed of 46 items was sent out to members of the European Low-Grade Glioma Network, the European Association of Neurosurgical Societies, the German Society of Neurosurgery and the Austrian Society of Neurosurgery. Results: A total of 128 fully completed surveys were received and analyzed. Most centers (n = 96, 75%) were academic and half of the centers (n = 64, 50%) adhered to a dedicated treatment program for DLGG. There were national differences regarding the sequences enclosed in MRI imaging and use of PET, however most included T1 (without and with contrast, 100%), T2 (100%) and TIRM or FLAIR (20, 98%). DWI is performed by 80% of centers and 61% of centers regularly performed PWI. Conclusion: A minimal core of imaging composed of T1 (w/wo contrast), T2, TIRM/FLAIR, PWI and DWI could be identified. All morphologic images should be obtained in a slice thickness of <= 3 mm. No common standard could be obtained regarding advanced MRI protocols and PET. Importance of the study: We believe that our study makes a significant contribution to the literature because we were able to determine similarities in numerous aspects of LGG imaging. Using the proposed "minimal core of imaging" in clinical routine will facilitate future cooperative studies.
- Published
- 2018
23. Involvement of the middle frontal gyrus in language switching as revealed by electrical stimulation mapping and functional magnetic resonance imaging in bilingual brain tumor patients
- Author
-
Sierpowska, J., Fernandez-Coello, A., Gomez-Andres, A., Camins, A., Castañer, S., Juncadella, M., Gabarrós, A., Rodríguez‐Fornells, A., Sierpowska, J., Fernandez-Coello, A., Gomez-Andres, A., Camins, A., Castañer, S., Juncadella, M., Gabarrós, A., and Rodríguez‐Fornells, A.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, Neural basis of language switching and the cognitive models of bilingualism remain controversial. We explored the functional neuroanatomy of language switching implementing a new multimodal protocol assessing neuropsychological, functional magnetic resonance and intraoperative electrical stimulation mapping results. A prospective series of 9 Spanish-Catalan bilingual candidates for awake brain surgery underwent a specific language switching paradigm implemented both before and after surgery, throughout the electrical stimulation procedure and during functional magnetic resonance both pre- and postoperatively. All patients were harboring left-hemispheric intrinsic brain lesions and were presenting functional language-related activations within the affected hemisphere. Language functional maps were reconstructed on the basis of the intraoperative electrical stimulation results and compared to the functional magnetic resonance findings. Single language-naming sites (Spanish and Catalan), as well as language switching naming sites were detected by electrical stimulation mapping in 8 patients (in one patient only Spanish related sites were detected). Single naming points outnumbered the switching points and did not overlap with each other. Within the frontal lobe, the single language naming sites were found significantly more frequently within the inferior frontal gyrus as compared to the middle frontal gyrus [X2 (1) = 20.3, p < .001]. Contrarily, switching naming sites were distributed across the middle frontal gyrus significantly more often than within the inferior frontal gyrus [X2 (1) = 4.1, p = .043]. Notably, there was not always an overlap between functional magnetic resonance and electrical stimulation mapping findings. After surgery, patients did not report involuntary language switching and their neuropsychological scores did not differ significantly from the pre-surgical examinations. Our results suggest a functional division of the frontal cortex between nami
- Published
- 2018
24. Language learning and brain reorganization in a 3.5-year-old child with left perinatal stroke revealed using structural and functional connectivity
- Author
-
François C, Ripollés P, Bosch L, García-Alix A, Muchart-Lopez J, Sierpowska J, Fons-Estupina C, Solé J, Rebollo M, Gaitán H, and Rodriguez-Fornells A
- Published
- 2016
25. Survey on current cognitive practices within the European Low-Grade Glioma Network: towards a European assessment protocol
- Author
-
Rofes, A, Mandonnet, E, Godden, J, Baron, M, Colle, H, Darlix, A, de Aguiar, V, Duffau, H, Herbet, G, Klein, M, Lubrano, V, Martino, J, Mathew, R, Miceli, G, Moritz Gasser, S, Pallud, J, Papagno, C, Rech, F, Robert, E, Rutten, G, Santarius, T, Satoer, D, Sierpowska, J, Smits, A, Skrap, M, Spena, G, Visch, E, De Witte, E, Zetterling, M, Wager, M, Wager, M., PAPAGNO, COSTANZA, Rofes, A, Mandonnet, E, Godden, J, Baron, M, Colle, H, Darlix, A, de Aguiar, V, Duffau, H, Herbet, G, Klein, M, Lubrano, V, Martino, J, Mathew, R, Miceli, G, Moritz Gasser, S, Pallud, J, Papagno, C, Rech, F, Robert, E, Rutten, G, Santarius, T, Satoer, D, Sierpowska, J, Smits, A, Skrap, M, Spena, G, Visch, E, De Witte, E, Zetterling, M, Wager, M, Wager, M., and PAPAGNO, COSTANZA
- Abstract
Background: The European Low-Grade Glioma network indicated a need to better understand common practices regarding the managing of diffuse low-grade gliomas. This area has experienced great advances in recent years. Method: A general survey on the managing of diffuse low-grade gliomas was answered by 21 centres in 11 European countries. Here we focused on specific questions regarding perioperative and intraoperative cognitive assessments. Results: More centres referred to the same speech and language therapist and/or neuropsychologist across all assessments; a core of assessment tools was routinely used across centres; fluency tasks were commonly used in the perioperative stages, and object naming during surgery; tasks that tapped on attention, executive functions, visuospatial awareness, calculation and emotions were sparsely administered; preoperative assessments were performed 1 month or 1 week before surgery; timing for postoperative assessments varied; finally, more centres recommended early rehabilitation, whenever needed. Conclusions: There is an emerging trend towards following similar practices for the management of low-grade gliomas in Europe. Our results are descriptive and formalise current discussions in our group. Also, they contribute towards the development of a European assessment protocol
- Published
- 2017
26. Interrelationships between electrical properties and microstructure of human trabecular bone
- Author
-
Sierpowska, J, primary, Hakulinen, M A, additional, Töyräs, J, additional, Day, J S, additional, Weinans, H, additional, Kiviranta, I, additional, Jurvelin, J S, additional, and Lappalainen, R, additional
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Prediction of mechanical properties of human trabecular bone by electrical measurements
- Author
-
Sierpowska, J, primary, Hakulinen, M A, additional, Töyräs, J, additional, Day, J S, additional, Weinans, H, additional, Jurvelin, J S, additional, and Lappalainen, R, additional
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Electrical and dielectric properties of bovine trabecular bone relationships with mechanical properties and mineral density
- Author
-
Sierpowska, J, primary, T yr s, J, additional, Hakulinen, M A, additional, Saarakkala, S, additional, Jurvelin, J S, additional, and Lappalainen, R, additional
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Electrical and dielectric properties of bovine trabecular bonerelationships with mechanical properties and mineral density
- Author
-
Sierpowska, J, Töyräs, J, Hakulinen, M A, Saarakkala, S, Jurvelin, J S, and Lappalainen, R
- Abstract
Interrelationships of trabecular bone electrical and dielectric properties with mechanical characteristics and density are poorly known. While electrical stimulation is used for healing fractures, better understanding of these relations has clinical importance. Furthermore, earlier studies have suggested that bone electrical and dielectric properties depend on the bone density and could, therefore, be used to predict bone strength. To clarify these issues, volumetric bone mineral density (BMDvol), electrical and dielectric as well as mechanical properties were determined from 40 cylindrical plugs of bovine trabecular bone. Phase angle, relative permittivity, loss factor and conductivity of wet bovine trabecular bone were correlated with Young's modulus, yield stress, ultimate strength, resilience and BMDvol. The reproducibility of in vitro electrical and dielectric measurements was excellent (standardized coefficient of variation less than 1&percent;, for all parameters), especially at frequencies higher than 1 kHz. Correlations of electrical and dielectric parameters with the bone mechanical properties or density were frequency-dependent. The relative permittivity showed the strongest linear correlations with mechanical parameters (r > 0.547, p < 0.01, n &equal; 40, at 50 kHz) and with BMDvol (r &equal; 0.866, p < 0.01, n &equal; 40, at 50 kHz). In general, linear correlations between relative permittivity and mechanical properties or BMDvol were highest at frequencies over 6 kHz. In addition, a significant site-dependent variation of electrical and dielectric characteristics, mechanical properties and BMDvol was revealed in bovine femur (p < 0.05, KruskallWallis H-test). Based on the present results, we conclude that the measurement of electrical and dielectric properties provides quantitative information that is related to bone quantity and quality.
- Published
- 2003
30. Mapping the dorsal and ventral language streams using electrical stimulation and diffusion tensor imaging
- Author
-
Sierpowska, J., Gabarrós, A., Fernandez-Coello, A., Camins, Á, Castañer, S., Juncadella, M., and Antoni Rodriguez Fornells
31. Survey on current cognitive practices within the European Low-Grade Glioma Network:towards a European assessment protocol
- Author
-
Maria Zetterling, Michel Wager, Marie Hélène Baron, Joanna Sierpowska, Juan Martino, Elke De Witte, Adrià Rofes, Evy Visch, John Godden, Gabriele Miceli, Costanza Papagno, Miran Skrap, Guillaume Herbet, Ryan K. Mathew, Djaina Satoer, Erik Robert, Fabien Rech, Thomas Santarius, Vânia de Aguiar, Anja Smits, Hugues Duffau, Johan Pallud, Martin Klein, Sylvie Moritz-Gasser, Henry Colle, Vincent Lubrano, Giannantonio Spena, Emmanuel Mandonnet, Amélie Darlix, Geert-Jan Rutten, Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (APHP), Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7), Imagerie et Modélisation en Neurobiologie et Cancérologie (IMNC (UMR_8165)), Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP), CCA - Cancer Treatment and quality of life, Amsterdam Neuroscience - Mood, Anxiety, Psychosis, Stress & Sleep, Medical psychology, Neurosurgery, Neurology, Rofes, A, Mandonnet, E, Godden, J, Baron, M, Colle, H, Darlix, A, de Aguiar, V, Duffau, H, Herbet, G, Klein, M, Lubrano, V, Martino, J, Mathew, R, Miceli, G, Moritz Gasser, S, Pallud, J, Papagno, C, Rech, F, Robert, E, Rutten, G, Santarius, T, Satoer, D, Sierpowska, J, Smits, A, Skrap, M, Spena, G, Visch, E, De Witte, E, Zetterling, M, and Wager, M
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Assessment ,Neurosurgical Procedures ,03 medical and health sciences ,Fluency ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cognition ,Postoperative Complications ,Protocol ,medicine ,Humans ,Medical physics ,Survey ,Protocol (science) ,[PHYS]Physics [physics] ,Medical education ,business.industry ,Brain Neoplasms ,Neuropsychology ,Perioperative ,Glioma ,Executive functions ,Europe ,Diffuse low-grade glioma ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Preoperative Period ,Neurosurgery ,Speech-Language Pathology ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
International audience; Background The European Low-Grade Glioma network indicated a need to better understand common practices regarding the managing of diffuse low-grade gliomas. This area has experienced great advances in recent years. Method A general survey on the managing of diffuse lowgrade gliomas was answered by 21 centres in 11 European countries. Here we focused on specific questions regarding perioperative and intraoperative cognitive assessments. Results More centres referred to the same speech and language therapist and/or neuropsychologist across all assessments; a core of assessment tools was routinely used across centres; fluency tasks were commonly used in the perioperative stages, and object naming during surgery; tasks that tapped on attention, executive functions, visuospatial awareness, calculation and emotions were sparsely administered; preoperative assessments were performed 1 month or 1 week before surgery; timing for postoperative assessments varied; finally, more centres recommended early rehabilitation, whenever needed. Conclusions There is an emerging trend towards following similar practices for the management of low-grade gliomas in Europe. Our results are descriptive and formalise current discussions in our group. Also, they contribute towards the development of a European assessment protocol.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Implantation of CRT pacemaker during pregnancy: estimated fetal radiation dose.
- Author
-
Manninen AL, Järvinen J, Sierpowska J, Mäkelä TJ, and Rissanen TT
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Pregnancy, Adult, Pacemaker, Artificial, Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy, Heart Failure therapy, Fetus radiation effects, Monte Carlo Method, Radiation Dosage, Phantoms, Imaging
- Abstract
The benefits of a cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) implantation are known in severe heart failure and its implantation may also be considered during pregnancy to ensure safe pregnancy and delivery for both the mother and the fetus. This study on a patient case aimed to estimate the absorbed dose (AD) to the fetus during the CRT implantation of 21st week of the pregnant woman. AD measurement was done using anthropomorphic phantom, radiophotoluminescence dosemeters and Monte Carlo simulation utilizing kerma area product (KAP) of the procedures. The measured AD for a phantom's uterus and heart was 0.116 and 14.7 mGy with total KAP of 27.9 Gycm2. The estimated actual AD to the fetus and the mother's heart was 0.004 and 1.2 mGy, with total KAP of 1.5 Gycm2. The dose to the fetus can be minimized with the optimized procedure., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Can the knight capture the queen? The role of supramarginal gyrus in chess rule-retrieval as evidenced by a novel combined awake brain mapping and fMRI protocol.
- Author
-
Cepero-Escribano V, Cerda-Company X, León-Cabrera P, Olivé G, Cucurell D, Gasa-Roqué A, Gabarrós A, Naval-Baudin P, Camins À, Rico I, Fernández-Coello A, Sierpowska J, and Rodríguez-Fornells A
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Adult, Electric Stimulation, Middle Aged, Wakefulness physiology, Reaction Time physiology, Cognition physiology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Parietal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Parietal Lobe physiology, Brain Mapping methods, Brain Neoplasms surgery, Brain Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Brain Neoplasms physiopathology
- Abstract
Brain tumours represent a burden for society, not only due to the risks they entail but also because of the possibility of losing relevant cognitive functions for the patient's life after their resection. In the present study, we report how we monitored chess performance through a multimodal Electrical Stimulation Mapping (ESM) - functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) combined protocol. The ESM was performed under a left parietal lobe tumour resection surgery on a patient that expressed the desire to preserve his chess playing ability post-operative. We designed an ad-hoc protocol to evaluate processes involved in chess performance that could be potentially affected by the tumour location: (i) visual search, (ii) rule-retrieval, and (iii) anticipation of checkmate. The fMRI study reported functional regions for chess performance, some of them proximal to the lesion in the left parietal lobe. The most relevant result was a positive eloquent point encountered in the vicinity of the left supramarginal gyrus while performing the rule-retrieval task in the ESM. This functional region was convergent with the activations observed in the pre-operative fMRI study for this condition. The behavioural assessment comparison revealed post-operative an increase in reaction time in some tasks but correctness in performance was maintained. Finally, the patient maintained the ability to play chess after the surgery. Our results provide a plausible protocol for future interventions and suggest a role of the left supramarginal gyrus in chess cognitive operations for the case presented., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Understanding language and cognition after brain surgery - Tumour grade, fine-grained assessment tools and, most of all, individualized approach.
- Author
-
Gasa-Roqué A, Rofes A, Simó M, Juncadella M, Rico Pons I, Camins A, Gabarrós A, Rodríguez-Fornells A, and Sierpowska J
- Subjects
- Humans, Quality of Life, Language, Cognition, Brain pathology, Brain Mapping, Brain Neoplasms complications, Brain Neoplasms surgery, Brain Neoplasms pathology, Glioma complications, Glioma surgery, Glioma pathology
- Abstract
Cognitive performance influences the quality of life and survival of people with glioma. Thus, a detailed neuropsychological and language evaluation is essential. In this work, we tested if an analysis of errors in naming can indicate semantic and/or phonological impairments in 87 awake brain surgery patients. Secondly, we explored how language and cognition change after brain tumour resection. Finally, we checked if low-tumour grade had a protective effect on cognition. Our results indicated that naming errors can be useful to monitor semantic and phonological processing, as their number correlated with scores on tasks developed by our team for testing these domains. Secondly, we showed that - although an analysis at a whole group level indicates a decline in language functions - significantly more individual patients improve or remain stable when compared to the ones who declined. Finally, we observed that having LGG, when compared with HGG, favours patients' outcome after surgery, most probably due to brain plasticity mechanisms. We provide new evidence of the importance of applying a broader neuropsychological assessment and an analysis of naming errors in patients with glioma. Our approach may potentially ensure better detection of cognitive deficits and contribute to better postoperative outcomes. Our study also shows that an individualized approach in post-surgical follow-ups can reveal reassuring results showing that significantly more patients remain stable or improve and can be a promising avenue for similar reports. Finally, the study captures that plasticity mechanisms may act as protective in LGG versus HGG after surgery., (© 2023 The Authors. Journal of Neuropsychology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The British Psychological Society.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Time course of right-hemisphere recruitment during word production following left-hemisphere damage: A single case of young stroke.
- Author
-
Chupina I, Sierpowska J, Zheng XY, Dewenter A, Piastra MC, and Piai V
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Brain Mapping, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Semantics, Temporal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Young Adult, Aphasia pathology, Stroke complications, Stroke diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Our understanding of post-stroke language function is largely based on older age groups, who show increasing age-related brain pathology and neural reorganisation. To illustrate language outcomes in the young-adult brain, we present the case of J., a 23-year-old woman with chronic aphasia from a left-hemisphere stroke affecting the temporal lobe. Diffusion MRI-based tractography indicated that J.'s language-relevant white-matter structures were severely damaged. Employing magnetoencephalography (MEG), we explored J.'s conceptual preparation and word planning abilities using context-driven and bare picture-naming tasks. These revealed naming deficits, manifesting as word-finding difficulties and semantic paraphasias about half of the time. Naming was however facilitated by semantically constraining lead-in sentences. Altogether, this pattern indicates disrupted lexical-semantic and phonological retrieval abilities. MEG revealed that J.'s conceptual and naming-related neural responses were supported by the right hemisphere, compared to the typical left-lateralised brain response of a matched control. Differential recruitment of right-hemisphere structures (330-440 ms post-picture onset) was found concurrently during successful naming (right mid-to-posterior temporal lobe) and word-finding attempts (right inferior frontal gyrus). Disconnection of the temporal lobes via corpus callosum was not critical for recruitment of the right hemisphere in visually guided naming, possibly due to neural activity right lateralising from the outset. Although J.'s right hemisphere responded in a timely manner during word planning, its lexical and phonological retrieval abilities remained modest., (© 2022 The Authors. European Journal of Neuroscience published by Federation of European Neuroscience Societies and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Comparing human and chimpanzee temporal lobe neuroanatomy reveals modifications to human language hubs beyond the frontotemporal arcuate fasciculus.
- Author
-
Sierpowska J, Bryant KL, Janssen N, Blazquez Freches G, Römkens M, Mangnus M, Mars RB, and Piai V
- Subjects
- Animals, Brain Mapping methods, Humans, Language, Neural Pathways anatomy & histology, Neuroanatomy, Pan troglodytes anatomy & histology, Temporal Lobe anatomy & histology, Temporal Lobe diagnostic imaging, White Matter anatomy & histology, White Matter diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
The biological foundation for the language-ready brain in the human lineage remains a debated subject. In humans, the arcuate fasciculus (AF) white matter and the posterior portions of the middle temporal gyrus are crucial for language. Compared with other primates, the human AF has been shown to dramatically extend into the posterior temporal lobe, which forms the basis of a number of models of the structural connectivity basis of language. Recent advances in both language research and comparative neuroimaging invite a reassessment of the anatomical differences in language streams between humans and our closest relatives. Here, we show that posterior temporal connectivity via the AF in humans compared with chimpanzees is expanded in terms of its connectivity not just to the ventral frontal cortex but also to the parietal cortex. At the same time, posterior temporal regions connect more strongly to the ventral white matter in chimpanzees as opposed to humans. This pattern is present in both brain hemispheres. Additionally, we show that the anterior temporal lobe harbors a combination of connections present in both species through the inferior fronto-occipital fascicle and human-unique expansions through the uncinate and middle and inferior longitudinal fascicles. These findings elucidate structural changes that are unique to humans and may underlie the anatomical foundations for full-fledged language capacity.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Inferior fronto-occipital fascicle displacement in temporoinsular gliomas using diffusion tensor imaging.
- Author
-
Camins À, Naval-Baudin P, Majós C, Sierpowska J, Sanmillan JL, Cos M, Rodriguez-Fornells A, and Gabarrós A
- Subjects
- Diffusion Tensor Imaging methods, Frontal Lobe, Humans, Brain Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Brain Neoplasms pathology, Brain Neoplasms surgery, Glioma diagnostic imaging, Glioma pathology, Glioma surgery, White Matter pathology
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: Brain tumors can result in displacement or destruction of important white matter tracts such as the inferior fronto-occipital fascicle (IFOF). Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) can assess the extent of this effect and potentially provide neurosurgeons with an accurate map to guide tumor resection; analyze IFOF displacement patterns in temporoinsular gliomas based on tumor grading and topography in the temporal lobe; and assess whether these patterns follow a predictable pattern, to assist in maximal tumor resection while preserving IFOF function., Methods: Thirty-four patients with temporal gliomas and available presurgical MRI were recruited. Twenty-two had insula infiltration. DTI deterministic region of interest (ROI)-based tractography was performed using commercial software. Tumor topographic imaging characteristics analyzed were as follows: location in the temporal lobe and extent of extratemporal involvement. Qualitative tractographic data obtained from directional DTI color maps included type of involvement (displaced/edematous-infiltrated/destroyed) and displacement direction. Quantitative tractographic data of ipsi- and contralateral IFOF included whole tract volume, fractional anisotropy, and fractional anisotropy of a 2-dimensional coronal ROI on the tract at the point of maximum tumor involvement., Results: The most common tract involvement pattern was edematous/infiltrative displacement. Displacement patterns depended on main tumor location in the temporal lobe and presence of insular involvement. All tumors showed superior displacement pattern. In lateral tumors, displacement tendency was medial. In medial tumors, displacement tendency was lateral. When we add insular involvement, the tendency was more medial displacement. A qualitative and quantitative assessment supported these results., Conclusions: IFOF displacement patterns are reproducible and suitable for temporoinsular gliomas presurgical planning., (© 2022 The Authors. Journal of Neuroimaging published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society of Neuroimaging.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Behavioural and neurophysiological signatures in the retrieval of individual memories of recent and remote real-life routine episodic events.
- Author
-
Nicolás B, Wu X, García-Arch J, Dimiccoli M, Sierpowska J, Saiz-Masvidal C, Soriano-Mas C, Radeva P, and Fuentemilla L
- Subjects
- Cues, Electroencephalography, Humans, Mental Recall, Recognition, Psychology, Memory, Episodic
- Abstract
Autobiographical memory (AM) has been largely investigated as the ability to recollect specific events that belong to an individual's past. However, how we retrieve real-life routine episodes and how the retrieval of these episodes changes with the passage of time remain unclear. Here, we asked participants to use a wearable camera that automatically captured pictures to record instances during a week of their routine life and implemented a deep neural network-based algorithm to identify picture sequences that represented episodic events. We then asked each participant to return to the lab to retrieve AMs for single episodes cued by the selected pictures 1 week, 2 weeks and 6-14 months after encoding while scalp electroencephalographic (EEG) activity was recorded. We found that participants were more accurate in recognizing pictured scenes depicting their own past than pictured scenes encoded in the lab, and that memory recollection of personally experienced events rapidly decreased with the passing of time. We also found that the retrieval of real-life picture cues elicited a strong and positive 'ERP old/new effect' over frontal regions and that the magnitude of this ERP effect was similar throughout memory tests over time. However, we observed that recognition memory induced a frontal theta power decrease and that this effect was mostly seen when memories were tested after 1 and 2 weeks but not after 6-14 months from encoding. Altogether, we discuss the implications for neuroscientific accounts of episodic retrieval and the potential benefits of developing individual-based AM exploration strategies at the clinical level., (Copyright © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. White matter hyperintensities at critical crossroads for executive function and verbal abilities in small vessel disease.
- Author
-
Camerino I, Sierpowska J, Reid A, Meyer NH, Tuladhar AM, Kessels RPC, de Leeuw FE, and Piai V
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Caudate Nucleus diagnostic imaging, Caudate Nucleus pathology, Caudate Nucleus physiopathology, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases pathology, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases physiopathology, Executive Function physiology, Nerve Net diagnostic imaging, Nerve Net pathology, Nerve Net physiopathology, Prefrontal Cortex diagnostic imaging, Prefrontal Cortex pathology, Prefrontal Cortex physiopathology, Psycholinguistics, White Matter diagnostic imaging, White Matter pathology, White Matter physiopathology
- Abstract
The presence of white matter lesions in patients with cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) is among the main causes of cognitive decline. We investigated the relation between white matter hyperintensity (WMH) locations and executive and language abilities in 442 SVD patients without dementia with varying burden of WMH. We used Stroop Word Reading, Stroop Color Naming, Stroop Color-Word Naming, and Category Fluency as language measures with varying degrees of executive demands. The Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT) was used as a control task, as it measures processing speed without requiring language use or verbal output. A voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping (VLSM) approach was used, corrected for age, sex, education, and lesion volume. VLSM analyses revealed statistically significant clusters for tests requiring language use, but not for SDMT. Worse scores on all tests were associated with WMH in forceps minor, thalamic radiations and caudate nuclei. In conclusion, an association was found between WMH in a core frontostriatal network and executive-verbal abilities in SVD, independent of lesion volume and processing speed. This circuitry underlying executive-language functioning might be of potential clinical importance for elderly with SVD. More detailed language testing is required in future research to elucidate the nature of language production difficulties in SVD., (© 2020 The Authors. Human Brain Mapping published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The black box of global aphasia: Neuroanatomical underpinnings of remission from acute global aphasia with preserved inner language function.
- Author
-
Sierpowska J, León-Cabrera P, Camins À, Juncadella M, Gabarrós A, and Rodríguez-Fornells A
- Subjects
- Brain diagnostic imaging, Female, Humans, Neuropsychological Tests, Semantics, Speech, Aphasia, Language
- Abstract
Objective: We studied an unusual case of global aphasia (GA) occurring after brain tumor removal and remitting one-month after surgery. After recovering, the patient reported on her experience during the episode, which suggested a partial preservation of language abilities (such as semantic processing) and the presence of inner speech (IS) despite a failure in overt speech production. Thus, we explored the role of IS and preserved language functions in the acute phase and investigated the neuroanatomical underpinnings of this severe breakdown in language processing., Method: A neuropsychological and language assessment tapping into language production, comprehension, attention and working memory was carried out both before and three months after surgery. In the acute stage a simplified protocol was tailored to assess the limited language abilities and further explore patient's performance on different semantic tasks. The neuroanatomical dimension of these abrupt changes was provided by perioperative structural neuroimaging., Results: Language and neuropsychological performance were normal/close to normal both before and three months after surgery. In the acute stage, the patient presented severe difficulties with comprehension, production and repetition, whereas she was able to correctly perform tasks that requested conceptual analysis and non-verbal operations. After recovering, the patient reported that she had been able to internally formulate her thoughts despite her overt phonological errors during the episode. Structural neuroimaging revealed that an extra-axial blood collection affected the middle frontal areas during the acute stage and that the white matter circuitry was left-lateralized before surgery., Conclusions: We deemed that the global aphasia episode was produced by a combination of the post-operative extra-axial blood collection directly impacting left middle frontal areas and a left-lateralization of the arcuate and/or uncinated fasciculi before surgery. Additionally, we advocate for a comprehensive evaluation of linguistic function that includes the assessment of IS and non-expressive language functions in similar cases., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2020 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Autobiographical memory in epileptic patients after temporal lobe resection or bitemporal hippocampal sclerosis.
- Author
-
Miró J, Ripollés P, Sierpowska J, Santurino M, Juncadella M, Falip M, and Rodríguez-Fornells A
- Subjects
- Female, Hippocampus diagnostic imaging, Hippocampus pathology, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Neuropsychological Tests, Sclerosis diagnostic imaging, Temporal Lobe, Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe surgery, Memory, Episodic
- Abstract
The human hippocampus is believed to be a crucial node in the neural network supporting autobiographical memory retrieval. Structural mesial temporal damage associated with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) provides an opportunity to systematically investigate and better understand the local and distal functional consequences of mesial temporal damage in the engagement of the autobiographical memory network. We examined 19 TLE patients (49.21 ± 11.55 years; 12 females) with unilateral mesial TLE (MTLE; 12 with anterior temporal lobe resection: 6 right MTLE, 6 left MTLE) or bilateral mesial TLE (7 BMTLE) and 18 matched healthy subjects. We used functional MRI (fMRI) with an adapted autobiographical memory paradigm and a specific neuropsychological test (Autobiographical Memory Interview, AMI). While engaged in the fMRI autobiographical memory paradigm, all groups activated a large fronto-temporo-parietal network. However, while this network was left lateralized for healthy participants and right MTLE patients, left MTLE and patients with BMTLE also showed strong activation in right temporal and frontal regions. Moreover, BMTLE and left MTLE patients also showed significant mild deficits in episodic autobiographical memory performance measured with the AMI test. The right temporal and extra-temporal fMRI activation, along with the impairment in autobiographical memory retrieval found in left MTLE and BMTLE patients suggest that alternate brain areas-other than the hippocampus-may also support this process, possibly due to neuroplastic effects.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Language Neuroplasticity in Brain Tumor Patients Revealed by Magnetoencephalography.
- Author
-
Piai V, De Witte E, Sierpowska J, Zheng X, Hinkley LB, Mizuiri D, Knight RT, Berger MS, and Nagarajan SS
- Subjects
- Brain Mapping, Humans, Language, Neuronal Plasticity, Brain Neoplasms, Magnetoencephalography
- Abstract
Little is known about language impairment in brain tumor patients, especially in the presurgical phase. Impairment in this population may be missed because standardized tests fail to capture mild deficits. Additionally, neuroplasticity may also contribute to minimizing language impairments. We examined 14 presurgical patients with brain tumors in the language-dominant hemisphere using magnetoencephalography (MEG) while they performed a demanding picture-word interference task, that is, participants name pictures while ignoring distractor words. Brain tumor patients had behavioral picture-naming effects typically observed in healthy controls. The MEG responses also showed the expected pattern in its timing and amplitude modulation typical of controls, but with an altered spatial distribution of right hemisphere sources, in contrast to the classic left hemisphere source found in healthy individuals. This finding supports tumor-induced neural reorganization of language before surgery. Crucially, the use of electrophysiology allowed us to show the "same" neuronal response in terms of its timing and amplitude modulation in the right hemisphere, supporting the hypothesis that the processes performed by the right hemisphere following reorganization are similar in nature to those (previously) performed by the left hemisphere. We also identified one participant with a fast-growing tumor affecting large parts of critical language areas and underlying ventral and dorsal white matter tracts who showed a deviant pattern in behavior and in the MEG event-related responses. In conclusion, our results attest to the validity of using a demanding picture-naming task in presurgical patients and provide evidence for neuroplasticity, with the right hemisphere performing similar computations as the left hemisphere typically performs.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. CONTEMPORARY RADIATION DOSES IN INTERVENTIONAL CARDIOLOGY: A NATIONWIDE STUDY OF PATIENT SKIN DOSES IN FINLAND.
- Author
-
Järvinen J, Sierpowska J, Siiskonen T, Husso M, Järvinen H, Kiviniemi T, Rissanen TT, Lindholm C, Matikka H, Larjava HRS, Mäkelä TJ, Strengell S, Eskola M, Parviainen T, Hallinen E, Pirinen M, Kivelä A, and Teräs M
- Subjects
- Aged, Finland, Fluoroscopy, Humans, Radiation Dosage, Radiography, Interventional, Skin, Cardiology, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
- Abstract
In contemporary interventional cardiology, for typical elderly patients, the most severe radiation-related harm to patients can be considered to come from skin exposures. In this paper, maximum local skin doses in cardiological procedures are explored with Gafchromic film dosimetry. Film and reader calibrations and reading were performed at the Secondary Standards Dosimetry Laboratory of the Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority (STUK), and data were gathered from seven hospitals in Finland. As alert levels for early transient erythema, 200 Gycm2 kerma area product (KAP) and 2000 mGy air kerma levels for transcatheter aortic valve implantations (TAVI) procedures are proposed. The largest doses were measured in TAVI (4158.8 mGy) and percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI) (941.68 mGy). Accuracies of the GE DoseWatch and Siemens CareMonitor skin dose estimates were reasonable, but more results are needed to reliably assess and validate the tools' capabilities and reliabilities. Uncertainty of the Gafchromic dosimetry was estimated as 9.1% for a calibration with seven data points and 19.3% for a calibration with five data points., (© The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. How the speed of word finding depends on ventral tract integrity in primary progressive aphasia.
- Author
-
Janssen N, Roelofs A, Mangnus M, Sierpowska J, Kessels RPC, and Piai V
- Subjects
- Atrophy pathology, Humans, Psycholinguistics, Aphasia, Primary Progressive diagnostic imaging, Aphasia, Primary Progressive pathology, Names, White Matter diagnostic imaging, White Matter pathology
- Abstract
Primary progressive aphasia (PPA) is a clinical neurodegenerative syndrome with word finding problems as a core clinical symptom. Many aspects of word finding have been clarified in psycholinguistics using picture naming and a picture-word interference (PWI) paradigm, which emulates naming under contextual noise. However, little is known about how word finding depends on white-matter tract integrity, in particular, the atrophy of tracts located ventrally to the Sylvian fissure. To elucidate this question, we examined word finding in individuals with PPA and healthy controls employing PWI, tractography, and computer simulations using the WEAVER++ model of word finding. Twenty-three individuals with PPA and twenty healthy controls named pictures in two noise conditions. Mixed-effects modelling was performed on naming accuracy and reaction time (RT) and fixel-based tractography analyses were conducted to assess the relation between ventral white-matter integrity and naming performance. Naming RTs were longer for individuals with PPA compared to controls and, critically, individuals with PPA showed a larger noise effect compared to controls. Moreover, this difference in noise effect was differentially related to tract integrity. Whereas the noise effect did not depend much on tract integrity in controls, a lower tract integrity was related to a smaller noise effect in individuals with PPA. Computer simulations supported an explanation of this paradoxical finding in terms of reduced propagation of noise when tract integrity is low. By using multimodal analyses, our study indicates the significance of the ventral pathway for naming and the importance of RT measurement in the clinical assessment of PPA., (Copyright © 2020 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. CONTEMPORARY RADIATION DOSES IN INTERVENTIONAL CARDIOLOGY: A NATIONWIDE STUDY OF PATIENT DOSES IN FINLAND.
- Author
-
Järvinen J, Sierpowska J, Siiskonen T, Järvinen H, Kiviniemi T, Rissanen TT, Matikka H, Niskanen E, Hurme S, Larjava HRS, Mäkelä TJ, Strengell S, Eskola M, Parviainen T, Hallinen E, Pirinen M, Kivelä A, and Teräs M
- Subjects
- Aged, Aortic Valve surgery, Atrioventricular Node pathology, Cardiology methods, Coronary Angiography, Electrophysiology, Female, Finland, Fluoroscopy, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention, Radiology, Interventional methods, Reference Values, Tachycardia pathology, Cardiology standards, Radiation Dosage, Radiography, Interventional methods, Radiology, Interventional standards, Radiometry
- Abstract
The amount of interventional procedures such as percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI), pacemaker implantation (PI) and ablations has increased within the previous decade. Simultaneously, novel fluoroscopy mainframes enable lower radiation doses for patients and operators. Therefore, there is a need to update the existing diagnostic reference levels (DRLs) and propose new ones for common or recently introduced procedures. We sought to assess patient radiation doses in interventional cardiology in a large sample from seven hospitals across Finland between 2014 and 2016. Data were used to set updated national DRLs for coronary angiographies (kerma-air product (KAP) 30 Gycm2) and PCIs (KAP 75 cm2), and novel levels for PIs (KAP 3.5 Gycm2), atrial fibrillation ablation procedures (KAP 25 Gycm2) and TAVI (KAP 90 Gycm2). Tentative KAP values were set for implantations of cardiac resynchronization therapy devices (CRT, KAP 22 Gycm2), electrophysiological treatment of atrioventricular nodal re-entry tachycardia (6 Gycm2) and atrial flutter procedures (KAP 16 Gycm2). The values for TAVI and CRT device implantation are published for the first time on national level. Dose from image acquisition (cine) constitutes the major part of the total dose in coronary and atrial fibrillation ablation procedures. For TAVI, patient weight is a good predictor of patient dose., (© The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Right Structural and Functional Reorganization in Four-Year-Old Children with Perinatal Arterial Ischemic Stroke Predict Language Production.
- Author
-
François C, Ripollés P, Ferreri L, Muchart J, Sierpowska J, Fons C, Solé J, Rebollo M, Zatorre RJ, Garcia-Alix A, Bosch L, and Rodriguez-Fornells A
- Subjects
- Brain Mapping, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Brain pathology, Brain physiopathology, Brain Ischemia complications, Brain Ischemia pathology, Brain Ischemia physiopathology, Functional Laterality, Neuronal Plasticity, Speech physiology, Stroke complications, Stroke pathology, Stroke physiopathology
- Abstract
Brain imaging methods have contributed to shed light on the mechanisms of recovery after early brain insult. The assumption that the unaffected right hemisphere can take over language functions after left perinatal stroke is still under debate. Here, we report how patterns of brain structural and functional reorganization were associated with language outcomes in a group of four-year-old children with left perinatal arterial ischemic stroke (PAIS). Specifically, we gathered specific fine-grained developmental measures of receptive and productive aspects of language as well as standardized measures of cognitive development. We also collected structural neuroimaging data as well as functional activations during a passive listening story-telling fMRI task and a resting state session (rs-fMRI). Children with a left perinatal stroke showed larger lateralization indices of both structural and functional connectivity of the dorsal language pathway towards the right hemisphere that, in turn, were associated with better language outcomes. Importantly, the pattern of structural asymmetry was significantly more right-lateralized in children with a left perinatal brain insult than in a group of matched healthy controls. These results strongly suggest that early lesions of the left dorsal pathway and the associated perisylvian regions can induce the interhemispheric transfer of language functions to right homolog regions. This study provides combined evidence of structural and functional brain reorganization of language networks after early stroke with strong implications for neurobiological models of language development., (Copyright © 2019 François et al.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. White matter cortico-striatal tracts predict apathy subtypes in Huntington's disease.
- Author
-
De Paepe AE, Sierpowska J, Garcia-Gorro C, Martinez-Horta S, Perez-Perez J, Kulisevsky J, Rodriguez-Dechicha N, Vaquer I, Subira S, Calopa M, Muñoz E, Santacruz P, Ruiz-Idiago J, Mareca C, de Diego-Balaguer R, and Camara E
- Subjects
- Adult, Diffusion Tensor Imaging, Female, Humans, Huntington Disease complications, Male, Middle Aged, Apathy physiology, Brain pathology, Huntington Disease pathology, Neural Pathways pathology, White Matter pathology
- Abstract
Background: Apathy is the neuropsychiatric syndrome that correlates most highly with Huntington's disease progression, and, like early patterns of neurodegeneration, is associated with lesions to cortico-striatal connections. However, due to its multidimensional nature and elusive etiology, treatment options are limited., Objectives: To disentangle underlying white matter microstructural correlates across the apathy spectrum in Huntington's disease., Methods: Forty-six Huntington's disease individuals (premanifest (N = 22) and manifest (N = 24)) and 35 healthy controls were scanned at 3-tesla and underwent apathy evaluation using the short-Problem Behavior Assessment and short-Lille Apathy Rating Scale, with the latter being characterized into three apathy domains, namely emotional, cognitive, and auto-activation deficit. Diffusion tensor imaging was used to study whether individual differences in specific cortico-striatal tracts predicted global apathy and its subdomains., Results: We elucidate that apathy profiles may develop along differential timelines, with the auto-activation deficit domain manifesting prior to motor onset. Furthermore, diffusion tensor imaging revealed that inter-individual variability in the disruption of discrete cortico-striatal tracts might explain the heterogeneous severity of apathy profiles. Specifically, higher levels of auto-activation deficit symptoms significantly correlated with increased mean diffusivity in the right uncinate fasciculus. Conversely, those with severe cognitive apathy demonstrated increased mean diffusivity in the right frontostriatal tract and left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex to caudate nucleus tract., Conclusions: The current study provides evidence that white matter correlates associated with emotional, cognitive, and auto-activation subtypes may elucidate the heterogeneous nature of apathy in Huntington's disease, as such opening a door for individualized pharmacological management of apathy as a multidimensional syndrome in other neurodegenerative disorders., (Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. White-matter pathways and semantic processing: intrasurgical and lesion-symptom mapping evidence.
- Author
-
Sierpowska J, Gabarrós A, Fernández-Coello A, Camins À, Castañer S, Juncadella M, François C, and Rodríguez-Fornells A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Brain Neoplasms surgery, Electric Stimulation, Female, Humans, Language, Male, Middle Aged, Neurosurgical Procedures methods, Semantics, Young Adult, Brain physiology, Brain Mapping methods, Comprehension physiology, Intraoperative Neurophysiological Monitoring methods, Neural Pathways physiology, White Matter physiology
- Abstract
In the present study, we aimed to test the association between the correct function of the left ventral white matter pathways and semantic processing (dual stream models for language processing, Hickok & Poeppel, 2004), using a new set of language tasks during intraoperative electrical stimulation at white matter level. Additionally, we evaluated brain regions needed for correct performance on the different semantic tasks using lesion-symptom analyses (voxel lesion-symptom mapping and track-wise lesion analysis) in a sample of 62 candidates for the awake brain surgery. We found that electrical stimulation in the vicinity of the inferior longitudinal and inferior fronto-occipital fasciculi disturbed performance on semantic processing tasks. Individuals presented with significantly more semantic paraphasias during brain tumor resection than during the electrical stimulation at the cortex level. Track-wise analyses confirmed the role of these left ventral pathways in semantic processing: a significant relationship was observed between the probability of inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus disconnection/damage and the semantic matching tasks, as well as the number of semantic paraphasias in naming. Importantly, the same analyses for the total score of the Boston Naming Test confirmed significant relationships between this test score and the integrity of the inferior fronto-occipital, inferior longitudinal and uncinate fasciculi. This was further supported by the results of VLSM analyses showing a significant relationship between BNT and the presence of lesion within left middle and inferior temporal gyri. The present findings provide new intraoperative evidence for the role of the white-matter ventral pathways in semantic processing, while at the same time emphasizing the need to include a broader assessment of semantic-conceptual aspects during the awake neurosurgical intervention. This approach will ensure better preservation of functional tissue in the tumoral vicinity and therefore substantially diminish post-surgical language impairments., (Copyright © 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Imaging practice in low-grade gliomas among European specialized centers and proposal for a minimum core of imaging.
- Author
-
Freyschlag CF, Krieg SM, Kerschbaumer J, Pinggera D, Forster MT, Cordier D, Rossi M, Miceli G, Roux A, Reyes A, Sarubbo S, Smits A, Sierpowska J, Robe PA, Rutten GJ, Santarius T, Matys T, Zanello M, Almairac F, Mondot L, Jakola AS, Zetterling M, Rofes A, von Campe G, Guillevin R, Bagatto D, Lubrano V, Rapp M, Goodden J, De Witt Hamer PC, Pallud J, Bello L, Thomé C, Duffau H, and Mandonnet E
- Subjects
- Brain Neoplasms surgery, Europe, Glioma surgery, Humans, Neoplasm Grading, Neurosurgical Procedures, Surveys and Questionnaires, Brain Neoplasms diagnosis, Glioma diagnosis, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Practice Guidelines as Topic standards, Practice Patterns, Physicians' standards, Specialization
- Abstract
Objective: Imaging studies in diffuse low-grade gliomas (DLGG) vary across centers. In order to establish a minimal core of imaging necessary for further investigations and clinical trials in the field of DLGG, we aimed to establish the status quo within specialized European centers., Methods: An online survey composed of 46 items was sent out to members of the European Low-Grade Glioma Network, the European Association of Neurosurgical Societies, the German Society of Neurosurgery and the Austrian Society of Neurosurgery., Results: A total of 128 fully completed surveys were received and analyzed. Most centers (n = 96, 75%) were academic and half of the centers (n = 64, 50%) adhered to a dedicated treatment program for DLGG. There were national differences regarding the sequences enclosed in MRI imaging and use of PET, however most included T1 (without and with contrast, 100%), T2 (100%) and TIRM or FLAIR (20, 98%). DWI is performed by 80% of centers and 61% of centers regularly performed PWI., Conclusion: A minimal core of imaging composed of T1 (w/wo contrast), T2, TIRM/FLAIR, PWI and DWI could be identified. All morphologic images should be obtained in a slice thickness of ≤ 3 mm. No common standard could be obtained regarding advanced MRI protocols and PET., Importance of the Study: We believe that our study makes a significant contribution to the literature because we were able to determine similarities in numerous aspects of LGG imaging. Using the proposed "minimal core of imaging" in clinical routine will facilitate future cooperative studies.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Music-supported therapy in the rehabilitation of subacute stroke patients: a randomized controlled trial.
- Author
-
Grau-Sánchez J, Duarte E, Ramos-Escobar N, Sierpowska J, Rueda N, Redón S, Veciana de Las Heras M, Pedro J, Särkämö T, and Rodríguez-Fornells A
- Abstract
The effect of music-supported therapy (MST) as a tool to restore hemiparesis of the upper extremity after a stroke has not been appropriately contrasted with conventional therapy. The aim of this trial was to test the effectiveness of adding MST to a standard rehabilitation program in subacute stroke patients. A randomized controlled trial was conducted in which patients were randomized to MST or conventional therapy in addition to the rehabilitation program. The intensity and duration of the interventions were equated in both groups. Before and after 4 weeks of treatment, motor and cognitive functions, mood, and quality of life (QoL) of participants were evaluated. A follow-up at 3 months was conducted to examine the retention of motor gains. Both groups significantly improved their motor function, and no differences between groups were found. The only difference between groups was observed in the language domain for QoL. Importantly, an association was encountered between the capacity to experience pleasure from music activities and the motor improvement in the MST group. MST as an add-on treatment showed no superiority to conventional therapies for motor recovery. Importantly, patient's intrinsic motivation to engage in musical activities was associated with better motor improvement., (© 2018 New York Academy of Sciences.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.