Functional MRI evidence for language plasticity in adult epileptic patients: Preliminary results.

Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat

UMR CNRS/UPMF 5105, Laboratoire de Psychologie et Neurocognition France.

Published: February 2008

AI Article Synopsis

  • The fMRI study investigates how language processing in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy is affected by when seizures start and the presence of hippocampal sclerosis.
  • Patients exhibited reduced hemispheric lateralization, meaning their brain activity was less concentrated in one hemisphere compared to healthy controls, with more involvement from the right hemisphere.
  • Those with early seizure onset showed more frequent reorganization of brain areas related to language, hinting at more adaptive changes, while hippocampal sclerosis appeared to aid the activation of both hemispheres during these processes.

Article Abstract

The present fMRI study explores the cerebral reorganisation of language in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy, according to the age of seizures onset (early or late) and the hippocampal sclerosis (associated or not). Seven right-handed control volunteers and seven preoperative adult epileptic patients performed a rhyme decision (language condition) and a visual detection (control condition) tasks in visually presented words and unreadable characters, respectively. All patients were left hemisphere dominant for language. Appropriate statistical analyses provided the following preliminary results: (1) patients compared with healthy subjects showed lower degree of hemispheric lateralization with supplementary involvement of the right hemisphere; (2) the degree of hemispheric specialization depends on the considered region; (3) patients with early seizures show signs of temporal and parietal reorganization more frequently than patients with late onset of seizures; (4) patients with early seizures show a tendency for intra-hemispheric frontal reorganisation; (5) associated hippocampal sclerosis facilitates the inter-hemispheric shift of temporal activation. Although our patients were left hemisphere predominant for language, the statistical analyses indicated that the degree of lateralization was significantly lower than in healthy subjects. This result has been considered as the indication of atypical lateralization of language.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2515912PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/ndt.s2330DOI Listing

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