Abstract

A remarkable preservation of sensorimotor function is observed in patients with refractory epilepsy who were treated by hemispherectomy. Cortical regions in the remaining hemisphere or contralateral subcortical region contribute to the residual sensorimotor function. Somatosensory evoked field (SEF) is used to investigate the residual sensory function in hemispherectomized patients. The SEFs are usually recorded with magnetoencephalography (MEG). The objective is to investigate the ipsilateral cortical regions associated with residual sensory function in hemispherectomized patients using somatosensory evoked field techniques. Six patients with anatomical hemispherectomy were included. Ipsilateral and contralateral sensory functions were assessed by physical examination. Somatosensory evoked fields to electrical stimulation of the bilateral median nerves were recorded by MEG in the hemispherectomized patients and six control subjects. The stimulus intensity was adjusted to the minimum threshold that elicited a thumb twitch. The presumed neuronal source was identified as the equivalent current dipole. Six patients demonstrated different degrees of residual sensory function. Three patients had somatosensory evoked field activation in the ipsilateral cortex upon electrical stimulation of the hemiplegic hand. In these patients the locations of the ipsilateral sensorimotor cortex activation were in the primary somatosensory cortex (SI). The latency of the reliable somatosensory evoked field after stimulation of the median nerve was significantly longer for responses from the hemiplegic side compared with responses to stimulation of the median nerve from the normal side. In conclusion, ipsilateral sensory function has a time-locked relation to the cortical electromagnetic activation in the SI area of hemispherectomized patients.

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