Pre-operative fMRI localization of the supplementary motor area and its relationship with postoperative speech deficits Journal Article


Authors: Lyo, J. K.; Arevalo Perez, J.; Petrovich Brennan, N.; Peck, K. K. ; Holodny, A. I.
Article Title: Pre-operative fMRI localization of the supplementary motor area and its relationship with postoperative speech deficits
Abstract: INTRODUCTION: Neurosurgery of the supplementary motor area (SMA) is associated with transient speech defects. We investigated whether SMA laterality correlates with postoperative speech defects. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The authors reviewed 17 patients with SMA-area lesion resection and preoperative language fMRI. SMA laterality was calculated by comparison of voxel activation in paired SMAs by hand-drawn regions of interest (ROIs) (drawn by a neuroradiologist), and compared with qualitative assessment by two neuroradiologists. Postoperative speech defects before and after surgery were assessed by chart review. RESULTS: Six patients developed new speech defects that resolved within several months. Two of the patients had a pre-existing speech defect that had developed after prior SMA-area surgery. All these patients had left-sided lesions, while none of the four patients with a right-sided lesion developed a speech defect. Neuroradiologists' assessment of SMA laterality agreed with ROI calculation for the SMAs that were lateralized. However, for the SMAs in the "codominant" range by ROI, the neuroradiologists felt that all but one of the cases clearly lateralized, with the exception deemed indeterminate or codominant. No correlation between laterality of SMA and speech defect was identified. Twelve patients showed lateralization contralateral to the lesion. CONCLUSIONS: fMRI lateralization does not correlate with transient speech defects that developed from SMA-area surgery. Qualitative/visual assessment of SMA laterality was superior to ROI calculation because of the close proximity and possible overlap of signal from midline SMA. A majority of patients showed SMA lateralization contralateral to the SMA lesion. © The Author(s) 2015.
Keywords: adult; middle aged; retrospective studies; pathophysiology; preoperative care; nuclear magnetic resonance imaging; neurosurgery; brain neoplasms; magnetic resonance imaging; cohort studies; cohort analysis; pathology; retrospective study; physiology; postoperative complication; postoperative complications; radiation injuries; fmri; language; hemispheric dominance; motor cortex; brain mapping; functional laterality; speech disorder; speech; sma; speech disorders; functional neuroimaging; humans; human; male; female
Journal Title: The Neuroradiology Journal
Volume: 28
Issue: 3
ISSN: 1971-4009
Publisher: Sage Publications Ltd.  
Date Published: 2015-06-01
Start Page: 281
End Page: 288
Language: English
DOI: 10.1177/1971400915589681
PUBMED: 26246097
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC4757287
DOI/URL:
Notes: Export Date: 2 December 2015 -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. John Kyungjin Lyo
    39 Lyo
  2. Nicole Brennan
    44 Brennan
  3. Kyung Peck
    116 Peck
  4. Andrei Holodny
    206 Holodny