Abstract

The dilemma of neuro-oncological surgery involving suspected eloquent cortex is to maximize the extent of resection while minimizing neurological morbidity, referred to as the "onco-functional balance." Diffuse lower-grade gliomas are capable of infiltrating or displacing neural function within cortical regions and subcortical white matter tracts, which can render classical anatomic associations of eloquent function misleading. This study employed presurgical navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation (nTMS) to determine the motor eloquence of a diffuse lower-grade glioma at the superior frontal gyrus extending and intrinsic to the primary motor cortex in a 45-year-old female. Positive nTMS findings were confirmed intraoperatively with high-frequency direct cortico-subcortical stimulation (HF-DCS). Modification of the HF-DCS train count from train-of-five to train-of-two permitted resection beyond classic anatomical boundaries and conventional HF-DCS safe stopping criteria. Anatomical correlates of function can inaccurately inform the surgical management of diffuse lower-grade glioma, which represents the utmost opportunity for progression-free survival. Integrating an individually tailored nTMS-DCS surgical strategy contributed to complete resection, negating the requirement for adjuvant therapy. Serial nTMS follow-up may assist with the characterization of tumor-induced functional reorganization. https://thejns.org/doi/10.3171/CASE24197.

Full Text
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