Quantitative phenotyping of verbal and non-verbal cognitive impairment using diffusion-weighted MRI connectome: Preliminary study of the crowding effect in children with left hemispheric epilepsy

•Crowding effect is non-verbal deficit after interhemispheric language reorganization.•Diffusion MRI connectome was applied to identify imaging markers of crowding effect.•Local efficiency of right verbal network is preserved in crowding effect group.•Local efficiency of right non-verbal network is...

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Veröffentlicht in:Epilepsy & behavior 2024-11, Vol.160, p.110009, Article 110009
Hauptverfasser: Jeong, Jeong-Won, Lee, Min-Hee, Behen, Michael, Uda, Hiroshi, Gjolaj, Nore, Luat, Aimee, Asano, Eishi, Juhász, Csaba
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Crowding effect is non-verbal deficit after interhemispheric language reorganization.•Diffusion MRI connectome was applied to identify imaging markers of crowding effect.•Local efficiency of right verbal network is preserved in crowding effect group.•Local efficiency of right non-verbal network is decreased in crowding effect group.•This approach may identify patients whose verbal skills may reorganize over time. The “crowding” effect (CE), wherein verbal functions are preserved presumably at the expense of nonverbal functions, which diminish following inter-hemispheric transfer of language functions, is recognized as a specific aspect of functional reorganization, offering an insight about neural plasticity in children with neural insult to the dominant hemisphere. CE is hypothesized as a marker for language preservation or improvement after left-hemispheric injury, yet it remains challenging to fully discern it in preoperative evaluation. We present a novel DWI connectome (DWIC) approach to predict the presence of CE in 24 drug-resistant epilepsy (DRE) patients with a left-hemispheric focus and 29 young healthy controls. Psychometry-driven DWIC analysis was applied to create verbal and non-verbal modular networks. Local efficiency (LE) was assessed at individual regions of the two networks and its Z-score was compared to predict the presence of CE. Compared with a traditional organization (TO) group, wherein verbal functions are adversely affected, while non-verbal functions are preserved, the CE group showed significantly higher Z-scores in verbal network and significantly lower Z-scores in non-verbal network, corresponding to network reorganization in CE. A larger number of antiseizure drugs was significantly associated with more decreased Z-score in the right non-verbal network of the CE group and left verbal network of the TO group. These findings hold great potential to identify DRE patients whose verbal/language skills may over time be preserved due to effective inter-hemispheric reorganization and identify those whose verbal/language impairments may persist due to lack of inter-hemispheric reorganization.
ISSN:1525-5050
1525-5069
1525-5069
DOI:10.1016/j.yebeh.2024.110009