White matter resection and verbal memory deficits after temporal lobe epilepsy surgery
Lawrence P Binding, Davide Giampiccolo, Yaqi Ji, Marine Fleury, Sherry Liu, Lorenzo Bianchi, Anna Miserocchi, Andrew W McEvoy, Sallie Baxendale, Matthias Koepp, Fenglai Xiao, Aidan G O’Keeffe, Meneka K Sidhu, Peter N Taylor, Jane de Tisi, Gavin P Winston, John S Duncan

TL;DR
Temporal lobe epilepsy surgery can cause verbal memory deficits, with damage to specific white matter tracts like the fornix and ventral cingulum playing a key role in memory encoding and retrieval.
Contribution
The study identifies distinct roles of the fornix and ventral cingulum in verbal memory encoding and retrieval after surgery.
Findings
Damage to the ventral cingulum is significantly related to verbal encoding deficits.
The fornix is associated with verbal retrieval outcomes after surgery.
Preserving these white matter tracts may help optimize memory outcomes post-surgery.
Abstract
Temporal lobe resection for focal, drug-resistant temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) causes verbal memory deficits in 30% of left hemisphere-operated patients. Structural, functional and computational modelling have shown a widespread structural and functional memory network with hubs in critical brain regions including the hippocampus, subcortical and neocortical regions. We hypothesized that damage to white matter pathways forming a network involving cortical and subcortical regions may be responsible for postoperative memory problems. In this study, we measured verbal memory encoding (immediate recall) and retrieval (delayed recall) outcome at three timepoints (preoperative, 3- and 12-month postoperatively) in 146 left TLE patients who underwent temporal lobe surgery and evaluated the impact of white matter tract section on verbal memory. Outcome was measured by the change in scores from…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEpilepsy research and treatment · Advanced Neuroimaging Techniques and Applications · Functional Brain Connectivity Studies
