Abstract

[15O]-water PET was performed on 12 patients with structural lesions for localization of the motor (n=5), language (receptive and expressive; n=6), and visual cortex (n=1). All these patients undeiwent interactive image-guided surgery using an infrared digitizer and intraoperative electrical stimulation mapping for motor, sensory, language, and visual cortex location. MRI-PET coregistration was performed using a surface matching approach t~at integrated functional information with interactive image guidance during the surgical procedure. An awake craniotomy with motor and sensory intraoperative stimulation was performed using a registered bipolar electrode that was tracked on real-time during the surgical procedure. Intraoperative functional findings were displayed and saved on the registered MRI images. The sites of functional PET activation during the performance of motor, visual and language tasks were then compared to the results of intraoperative cortical stimulation in 11 patients and visual evoked potentials in one. The results of the PET activation studies were concordant with the findings of intra operative stimulation in all cases. During resection of the structural lesions, intraoperative stimulation was continued in the subcortical pathways, and five patients had positive responses on areas not identified by the functional PET. Furthermore, 3 patients showed transitory changes in function (speech arrest 1, naming difficulty 1, and , motor weakness 1) that were reversible after changing the dissection technique or a brain retractor. [15O]-water PET was reliable in identifying the motor, visual, and language cortex. Language-related rCBF increases were highly distributive, although only part of these activations were subjected to intraoperative stimulation. We conclude that rtSOl-water PET can be used for preoperative noninvasive identification of functional cortex and may be useful in neurosurgical preplanning. Intraoperative mapping still remains the main means to avoid neurological damage as it can be performed during the entire surgical procedure to avoid damage to cortex, pathways, and damage secondary to ischemia or edema (brain retraction). [Neural Res 1997; 19: 601-608].

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