2002
DOI: 10.1148/radiol.2233010792
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Arteriovenous Brain Malformations: Is Functional MR Imaging Reliable for Studying Language Reorganization in Patients? Initial Observations

Abstract: These data suggest that flow abnormalities may interfere with language lateralization assessment with functional MR imaging.

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Cited by 116 publications
(54 citation statements)
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“…Tumors and congenital lesions may cause neurovascular coupling, compromising the blood oxygen level-dependent functional MR imaging signal in the regional eloquent cortex (2,5,(41)(42)(43). The area of motor cortex activation is influenced by the rate and force of contractions (44)(45)(46)(47)(48)(49)(50)(51).…”
Section: Figurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Tumors and congenital lesions may cause neurovascular coupling, compromising the blood oxygen level-dependent functional MR imaging signal in the regional eloquent cortex (2,5,(41)(42)(43). The area of motor cortex activation is influenced by the rate and force of contractions (44)(45)(46)(47)(48)(49)(50)(51).…”
Section: Figurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…As previously stated, concordance with the IAP is high for TLE, but may drop to 75% or lower in patients with extratemporal epilepsy. Finally, there is evidence that the hemodynamic response in fMRI is suppressed in a sizable number of patients with lesions that result in abnormal vascularization (82,83), making fMRI unreliable in many patients with large gliomas or AVMs. Nevertheless, fMRI provides a cost-efficient, noninvasive method of language and memory localization, and its wide availability makes it a strong contender for eventually replacing the IAP.…”
Section: Fmrimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As suggested by other studies (Lehericy et al 2002;Ries et al 2004;Thivard et al 2005), the language reorganization should be explored at regional rather than at hemispheric level, because the reorganisation pattern depend on the region taken into account. Furthermore, the reorganisation of temporal regions occurs more frequently than the reorganisation of frontal regions.…”
Section: Cousin Et Almentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, they showed that language reorganization occurs in pre-existing bilateral networks which could not be detected preoperatively but postoperatively. This pattern, also called "translocation of language function" (Lazar et al 1997), is interpreted as an over-activity of frontal region with probably taking into account the function of other language regions, such as the posterior (temporo-parietal) ipsilateral areas (Lehericy et al 2002). This pattern could also refl ect lower involvement of temporal regions during language, due to their pathological condition (Ries et al 2004).…”
Section: Frontal Regionmentioning
confidence: 99%