Language Cerebro-cerebellar Reorganization in Children After Surgery of Right Cerebellar Astrocytoma: a fMRI Study.

Cerebellum

Developmental Neurology Unit, Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Neurologico Carlo Besta, Via Celoria 11, 20133, Milan, Italy.

Published: August 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how language processing reorganization occurs in children after cerebellar lesions, focusing on functional changes in the brain's language areas and the cerebellum.
  • Using fMRI during a phonological task, researchers found distinct brain activation patterns in healthy children vs. those who had undergone surgery for right cerebellar astrocytoma, highlighting variability in how patients' brains adapt.
  • The findings suggest that cerebellar lesions can affect language efficiency and that factors like the lesion's location and timing of surgery play a role in the brain's ability to reorganize, though specific predictive variables remain unclear.

Article Abstract

Language processing depends on an integrated circuit involving the left supratentorial language areas and the right posterior lateral cerebellar hemisphere (lobule VI, lobule VII, Crus I, and Crus II). Reorganization of the language system after lesions of the cerebral language areas includes also cerebellar relocation. This is the first study assessing functional language reorganization after lesions concerning primarily the cerebellum, using a fMRI paradigm of phonological covert word production task in six children operated for right cerebellar astrocytoma and in 15 typically developing children. We found right cerebellar and left frontal activations in healthy controls and high variability of reorganizational patterns in patients with early right cerebellar lesion. Also lesions not located in the areas typically involved in language tasks (Crus I and Crus II) can cause reorganization between the two hemispheres or hemispheric language reinforcement of the original lateralization. We discuss the role of several variables in determining the reorganizational pattern such as the site, extension, and timing of surgery. No variables revealed as predictors, suggesting that co-occurring influence of other biological and/or pathological factors are not yet demonstrated. Lesions in the postero-lateral cerebellum seem related to less efficient language performances, as an indicator of the system's functioning.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12311-019-01039-zDOI Listing

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