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Presurgical motor, somatosensory and language fMRI: Technical feasibility and limitations in 491 patients over 13 years

Tyndall, Anthony J. and Reinhardt, Julia and Tronnier, Volker and Mariani, Luigi and Stippich, Christoph. (2017) Presurgical motor, somatosensory and language fMRI: Technical feasibility and limitations in 491 patients over 13 years. European Radiology, 27 (1). pp. 267-278.

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Official URL: https://edoc.unibas.ch/62082/

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Abstract

To analyse the long-term feasibility and limitations of presurgical fMRI in a cohort of tumour and epilepsy patients with different MR-scanners at 1.5 and 3.0 T.; Four hundred and ninety-one consecutive patients undergoing presurgical fMRI between 2000 and 2012 on five different MR-scanners using established paradigms and semi-automated data processing were included. Success rates of task performance and BOLD-activation were determined for motor and somatosensory somatotopic mapping and language localisation. Procedural success, failures and imaging artifacts were analysed. MR-field strengths were compared.; Two thousand three hundred fifteen of 2348 (98.6 %) attempted paradigms (1033 motor, 1220 speech, 95 somatosensory) were successfully performed. 100 paradigms (4.3 %) were repetition runs. 23 speech, 6 motor and 2 sensory paradigms failed for non-compliance and technical issues. Most language paradigm failures were noted in overt sentence generation. Average significant BOLD-activation was higher for motor than language paradigms (95.8 vs. 81.6 %). Most language paradigms showed significantly higher activation rates at 3 T compared to 1.5 T, whereas no significant difference was found for motor paradigms.; fMRI proved very robust for the presurgical localisation of the different motor and somatosensory body representations, as well as Broca's and Wernicke's language areas across different MR-scanners at 1.5 and 3.0 T over 13 years.; • Standardised presurgical motor and language fMRI is robust across various MRI platforms. • Motor fMRI is less dependent on field strength than language fMRI. • fMRI task failures are relatively low and are reduced by paradigm repetition.
Faculties and Departments:03 Faculty of Medicine > Bereich Operative Fächer (Klinik) > Kopfbereich > Neurochirurgie (Mariani)
03 Faculty of Medicine > Departement Klinische Forschung > Bereich Operative Fächer (Klinik) > Kopfbereich > Neurochirurgie (Mariani)
03 Faculty of Medicine > Departement Biomedizin > Department of Biomedicine, University Hospital Basel > Brain Tumor Biology (Mariani)
03 Faculty of Medicine > Departement Klinische Forschung
UniBasel Contributors:Reinhardt, Julia and Mariani, Luigi and Stippich, Christoph
Item Type:Article, refereed
Article Subtype:Research Article
Publisher:Springer
ISSN:0938-7994
e-ISSN:1432-1084
Note:Publication type according to Uni Basel Research Database: Journal article
Identification Number:
Last Modified:23 Apr 2020 13:52
Deposited On:23 Apr 2020 13:52

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