Abstract

Brain functions, including cognitive functions, are frequently disturbed in brain tumor patients. These disturbances may result from the tumor itself, but also from the treatment directed against the tumor. Surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy all may affect cerebral functioning, both in a positive as well as in a negative way. Apart from the anti-tumor treatment, glioma patients often receive glucocorticoids and anti-epileptic drugs, which both also have influence on brain functioning. The effect of a brain tumor on cerebral functioning is often more global than should be expected on the basis of the local character of the disease, and this is thought to be a consequence of disturbance of the cerebral network as a whole. Any network, whether it be a neural, a social or an electronic network, can be described in parameters assessing the topological characteristics of that particular network. Repeated assessment of neural network characteristics in brain tumor patients during their disease course enables study of the dynamics of neural networks and provides more insight into the plasticity of the diseased brain. Functional MRI, electroencephalography and especially magnetoencephalography are used to measure brain function and the signals that are being registered with these techniques can be analyzed with respect to network characteristics such as “synchronization” and “clustering”. Evidence accumulates that loss of optimal neural network architecture negatively impacts complex cerebral functioning and also decreases the threshold to develop epileptic seizures. Future research should be focused on both plasticity of neural networks and the factors that have impact on that plasticity as well as the possible role of assessment of neural network characteristics in the determination of cerebral function during the disease course.

Highlights

  • Optimal functioning of the brain depends on a large number of factors

  • Cerebral functioning in a person who is generally ill as a result of infectious disease or disseminated cancer may be severely impaired

  • We have shown that most low-grade gliomas (LGG) and high-grade gliomas (HGG) patients perform significantly worse than healthy controls on almost all cognitive tests

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Summary

Introduction

Optimal functioning of the brain depends on a large number of factors. Motor and sensory functioning, cognitive functioning, autonomic functioning, as well as emotional and social functioning all depend on anatomic and physiological integrity of the neural networks.This integrity may be disturbed by numerous factors, varying from intrinsic brain disease to mood disorders and from metabolic disturbances and general disease to exogenous intoxications. Apart from the anti-tumor treatment, glioma patients often receive glucocorticoids and anti-epileptic drugs, which both have influence on brain functioning. Radiotherapy, anti-epileptic drugs, glucocorticoids and various chemotherapy regimens may have influence on cerebral functioning of brain tumor patients.

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