Abstract

Brain awake surgery with cognitive monitoring for tumor removal has become a standard of treatment for functional purpose. Yet, little attention has been given to patients’ interpretation and awareness of their own responses to selected cognitive tasks during direct electrostimulation (DES). We aim to report disruptions of self-evaluative processing evoked by DES during awake surgery. We further investigate cortico-subcortical structures involved in self-assessment process and report the use of an intraoperative self-assessment tool, the self-confidence index (SCI). Seventy-two patients who had undergone awake brain tumor resections were selected. Inclusion criteria were the occurrence of a DES-induced disruption of an ongoing task followed by patient’s failure to remember or criticize these impairments, or a dissociation between patient’s responses to an ongoing task and patient’s SCI. Disruptions of self-evaluation were frequently associated with semantic disorders and critical sites were mostly found along the left/right ventral semantic streams. Disconnectome analyses generated from a tractography-based atlas confirmed the high probability of the inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus to be transitory ‘disconnected’. These findings suggest that white matters pathways belonging to the ventral semantic stream may be critically involved in human self-evaluative processing. Finally, the authors discuss the implementation of the SCI task during multimodal intraoperative monitoring.

Highlights

  • Brain awake surgery with cognitive monitoring for tumor removal has become a standard of treatment for functional purpose

  • direct electrostimulation (DES) mapping is widely acknowledged as an effective means of accurately mapping domainspecific functions, only few reports have established its potential for identifying the neural circuitry involved in complex, higher-order ­cognitions[18]

  • As self-evaluative processing is likely to rely on the resources of multiple functional networks, the main finding of this study does not rule out the possibility that other structures may participate in this complex function

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Brain awake surgery with cognitive monitoring for tumor removal has become a standard of treatment for functional purpose. Disconnectome analyses generated from a tractography-based atlas confirmed the high probability of the inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus to be transitory ‘disconnected’ These findings suggest that white matters pathways belonging to the ventral semantic stream may be critically involved in human self-evaluative processing. It has been recently reported that patients may still suffer from mild neurocognitive disturbances after surgery despite awake monitoring (including long-lasting executive functioning i­mpairment[11], decrease of attentional ­processes[12] or behavioral c­ hanges[13,14]). This prompted our group to ask patients if they were aware of their DESinduced disorders while performing intraoperative tasks

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call