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- Title
The characteristics of brain structural remodeling in patients with unilateral vestibular schwannoma.
- Authors
Tang, Hanlu; Bie, Zhixu; Wang, Bo; Yang, Zhijun; Li, Peng; Wang, Xingchao; Liu, Pinan
- Abstract
Purpose: Brain structural remodeling alters related brain function. However, few studies have assessed morphological alterations of unilateral vestibular schwannoma (VS) patients. Therefore, this study examined the characteristics of brain structural remodeling in unilateral VS patients. Methods: We recruited 39 patients with unilateral VS (19 left, 20 right) and 24 matched normal controls (NCs). We obtained brain structural imaging data using 3T T1-weighted anatomical and diffusion tensor imaging scans. Then, we evaluated both gray and white matter (WM) changes using FreeSurfer software and tract-based spatial statistics, respectively. Furthermore, we constructed a structural covariance network to assess brain structural network properties and the connectivity strength between brain regions. Results: Compared with NCs, VS patients showed cortical thickening in non-auditory areas (e.g., the left precuneus), especially left VS patients, along with reduced cortical thickness in the right superior temporal gyrus (auditory areas). VS patients also showed increased fractional anisotropy in extensive non-auditory-related WM (e.g., the superior longitudinal fasciculus), especially right VS patients. Both left and right VS patients showed increased small-worldness (more efficient information transfer). Left VS patients had a single reduced-connectivity subnetwork in contralateral temporal regions (right-side auditory areas), but increased connectivity between some non-auditory regions (e.g., left precuneus and left temporal pole). Conclusion: VS patients exhibited greater morphological alterations in non-auditory than auditory areas, with structural reductions seen in related auditory areas and a compensatory increase in non-auditory areas. Left and right VS patients show differential patterns of brain structural remodeling. These findings provide a new perspective on the treatment and postoperative rehabilitation of VS.
- Subjects
VOXEL-based morphometry; ACOUSTIC neuroma; BRAIN imaging; TEMPORAL lobe; DIFFUSION tensor imaging; PATIENTS' rights; WHITE matter (Nerve tissue)
- Publication
Journal of Neuro-Oncology, 2023, Vol 162, Issue 1, p79
- ISSN
0167-594X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s11060-023-04247-0