Abstract

Accurate presurgical mapping of motor, speech, and language cortices, while crucial for neurosurgical planning and minimizing post-operative functional deficits, is challenging in young children with neurological disease. In such children, both invasive (cortical stimulation mapping) and non-invasive functional mapping imaging methods (MEG, fMRI) have limited success, often leading to delayed surgery or adverse post-surgical outcomes. We therefore examined the clinical utility of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) in young children who require functional mapping. In a retrospective chart review of TMS studies performed on children with refractory epilepsy or a brain tumor, at our institution, we identified 47 mapping sessions in 36 children 3 years of age or younger, in whom upper and lower extremity motor mapping was attempted; and 13 children 5–6 years old in whom language mapping, using a naming paradigm, was attempted. The primary hand motor cortex was identified in at least one hemisphere in 33 of 36 patients, and in both hemispheres in 27 children. In 17 children, primary leg motor cortex was also successfully identified. The language cortices in temporal regions were successfully mapped in 11 of 13 patients, and in six of them language cortices in frontal regions were also mapped, with most children (n = 5) showing right hemisphere dominance for expressive language. Ten children had a seizure that was consistent with their clinical semiology during or immediately following TMS, none of which required intervention or impeded completion of mapping. Using TMS, both normal motor, speech, and language developmental patterns and apparent disease induced reorganization were demonstrated in this young cohort. The successful localization of motor, speech, and language cortices in young children improved the understanding of the risk-benefit ratio prior to surgery and facilitated surgical planning aimed at preserving motor, speech, and language functions. Post-operatively, motor function was preserved or improved in nine out of 11 children who underwent surgery, as was language function in all seven children who had surgery for lesions near eloquent cortices. We provide feasibility data that TMS is a safe, reliable, and effective tool to map eloquent cortices in young children.

Highlights

  • Presurgical mapping of the critical cortex in patients undergoing neurosurgery is critical in assisting surgical planning and minimizing post-operative deficits

  • All children had an identifiable lesion on the Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), with the lesion found in the left hemisphere in 33%, in the right hemisphere in 42%, and bilateral in 25% of the children

  • While transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) motor mapping studies in healthy children as young as 0.2 years have demonstrated that reproducible Motor Evoked Potentials (MEP) can be elicited in young children [62, 63], we demonstrate here that similar mapping is feasible in children of this age group with neurological disease

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Summary

Introduction

Presurgical mapping of the critical cortex in patients undergoing neurosurgery is critical in assisting surgical planning and minimizing post-operative deficits. The realization that CSM and Wada testing have a number of limitations [1, 2] has led to the emergence of safer non-invasive alternatives, including magnetoencephalography (MEG) [3], functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) [4, 5], and more recently, transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) [6,7,8,9,10] These non-invasive methods are approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for use in presurgical functional mapping and are used alongside Wada and CSM to determine hemispheric dominance, to localize motor, speech, and language cortices in the vicinity of the lesion, and to plan the surgical approach. TMS could be uniquely suited to overcome challenges that other methods cannot, providing clinicians and patients with information critical to improved outcomes

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