Abstract

Anterior temporal lobe resection can control seizures in up to 80% of patients with temporal lobe epilepsy. Memory decrements are the main neurocognitive complication. Preoperative functional reorganization has been described in memory networks, but less is known of postoperative reorganization. We investigated reorganization of memory-encoding networks preoperatively and 3 and 12 months after surgery. We studied 36 patients with unilateral medial temporal lobe epilepsy (19 right) before and 3 and 12 months after anterior temporal lobe resection. Fifteen healthy control subjects were studied at three equivalent time points. All subjects had neuropsychological testing at each of the three time points. A functional magnetic resonance imaging memory-encoding paradigm of words and faces was performed with subsequent out-of-scanner recognition assessments. Changes in activations across the time points in each patient group were compared to changes in the control group in a single flexible factorial analysis. Postoperative change in memory across the time points was correlated with postoperative activations to investigate the efficiency of reorganized networks. Left temporal lobe epilepsy patients showed increased right anterior hippocampal and frontal activation at both 3 and 12 months after surgery relative to preoperatively, for word and face encoding, with a concomitant reduction in left frontal activation 12 months postoperatively. Right anterior hippocampal activation 12 months postoperatively correlated significantly with improved verbal learning in patients with left temporal lobe epilepsy from preoperatively to 12 months postoperatively. Preoperatively, there was significant left posterior hippocampal activation that was sustained 3 months postoperatively at word encoding, and increased at face encoding. For both word and face encoding this was significantly reduced from 3 to 12 months postoperatively. Patients with right temporal lobe epilepsy showed increased left anterior hippocampal activation on word encoding from 3 to 12 months postoperatively compared to preoperatively. On face encoding, left anterior hippocampal activations were present preoperatively and 12 months postoperatively. Left anterior hippocampal and orbitofrontal cortex activations correlated with improvements in both design and verbal learning 12 months postoperatively. On face encoding, there were significantly increased left posterior hippocampal activations that reduced significantly from 3 to 12 months postoperatively. Postoperative changes occur in the memory-encoding network in both left and right temporal lobe epilepsy patients across both verbal and visual domains. Three months after surgery, compensatory posterior hippocampal reorganization that occurs is transient and inefficient. Engagement of the contralateral hippocampus 12 months after surgery represented efficient reorganization in both patient groups, suggesting that the contralateral hippocampus contributes to memory outcome 12 months after surgery.

Highlights

  • Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is associated with widespread cognitive deficits with material-specific episodic memory impairment being most commonly described; verbal memory loss in patients with left TLE and visual in those with right TLE

  • Left TLE Controls performed significantly better than patients with left TLE at all three time points

  • Patients with right TLE showed a nonsignificant decline in design learning scores from Preoperative to Postoperative 1 and Preoperative to Postoperative 2 and a significant decline in verbal learning between Preoperative and Postoperative 1 (Table 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is associated with widespread cognitive deficits with material-specific episodic memory impairment being most commonly described; verbal memory loss in patients with left TLE and visual in those with right TLE. Up to 80% of patients with TLE achieve remissions of at least 12 months after anterior temporal lobe resection (ATLR) (de Tisi et al, 2011) Deterioration of both verbal and visual episodic memory has been described as a consequence of surgery, verbal memory decline after dominant ATLR remains the most consistent finding, occurring in up to 30% of patients. The greater the activation within the ‘to-be-resected’ anterior medial temporal lobe, the greater the verbal and visual decline after left and right ATLR, respectively (Richardson et al, 2004; Powell et al, 2008; Bonelli et al, 2010; Binder, 2011) in keeping with the hippocampal adequacy model of memory outcome after ATLR (Chelune, 1995). The extent of hippocampal resection is an important determinant of postoperative memory function and has important implications on surgical planning (Baxendale et al, 2000; Alpherts et al, 2008; Schramm, 2008)

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