Evaluación de la actividad cerebro-cerebelar cruzada para determinar la lateralidad del lenguaje en pacientes con tumores cerebrales
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2021Metadata
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Méndez Orellana, Carolina
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Evaluación de la actividad cerebro-cerebelar cruzada para determinar la lateralidad del lenguaje en pacientes con tumores cerebrales
Author
- Méndez Orellana, Carolina;
- Arraño Carrasco, Leonardo;
- Cortés Rivera, Bárbara;
- Sandoval León, Karina;
- Lorenzoni Santos, José;
- Villanueva Garín, Pablo;
- Rojas Valdivia, Ricardo;
- Méndez Ortega, Teobaldo;
- Monsalve Rosales, Jaime;
- Flores Kruuse, Paulo Andres;
- Carmona Rammsy, Pablo Rodrigo;
- Rojas Pinto, David;
- Reyes Ponce, Álvaro;
- Mery Muñoz, Francisco;
Abstract
Background: The crossed cerebro-cerebellar (CCC) activation facilitates
the diagnosis of cortical language lateralization, but needs to be explored with
language tasks suitable for patients with different age ranges, educational
attainment and eventual presence of language deficits. Aim: To determine
the effect of demographic variables in the performance of three language
tasks in healthy volunteers and to determine the CCC activation of these
tasks as a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) paradigm in
brain tumor patients. Material and Methods: The behavioral performance
(correct responses and reaction time) of three language tasks (verbal fluency,
semantic and phonological decision tasks) was first examined in 76 healthy
volunteers balanced by age and educational level. Later, these tasks were
implemented as fMRI paradigms to explore CCC language activation of 20
patients with potential diagnosis of brain tumors. Results: The performance
of the verbal fluency task was affected by age. The CCC language activation
was reproducible with the semantic and phonological tasks. The combination
of the tasks determined typical and atypical language lateralization in 60%
and 40% of our patients, respectively. Conclusions: The verbal fluency task
must be implemented with care as a clinical fMRI paradigm. Our results
suggest that semantic and phonological tasks can be a good alternative for
brain tumor patients with language deficits.
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Artículo de publícación WoS Artículo de publicación SCIELO
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Rev Med Chile 2021; 149: 689-697
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