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Language lateralization in epilepsy patients: fMRI validated with the Wada procedure
Authors:Jagriti Arora,&dagger  &Dagger  Kenneth Pugh,§  Michael Westerveld,§  Susan Spencer,§  Dennis D. Spencer, §    R. Todd Constable
Affiliation:Departments of Diagnostic Radiology;and Pediatrics, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, U.S.A.;, Haskins Laboratories, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, U.S.A.;, Departments of Neurosurgery;and Biomedical Engineering, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, U.S.A.
Abstract:
Purpose:  This work examines the efficacy of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) for language lateralization using a comprehensive three-task language-mapping approach. Two localization methods and four different metrics for quantifying activation within hemisphere are compared and validated with Wada testing. Sources of discordance between fMRI and Wada lateralization are discussed with respect to specific patient examples.
Methods:  fMRI language mapping was performed in patients with epilepsy (N = 40) using reading sentence comprehension, auditory sentence comprehension, and a verbal fluency task. This was compared with the Wada procedure using both whole-brain and midline exclusion–based analyses. Different laterality scores were examined as a function of statistical threshold to investigate the sensitivity to threshold effects.
Results:  For the lateralized patients categorized by Wada, fMRI laterality indices (LIs) were concordant with the Wada procedure results in 83.87% patients for the reading task, 83.33% patients for the auditory task, 76.92% patients for the verbal fluency task, and in 91.3% patients for the conjunction analysis. The patients categorized as bilateral via the Wada procedure showed some hemispheric dominance in fMRI, and discrepancies between the Wada test findings and the functional laterality scores arose for a range of reasons.
Discussion:  Discordance was dependent upon whether whole-brain or midline exclusion method–based lateralization was calculated, and in the former case the inclusion of the occipital and other midline regions often negatively influenced the lateralization scores. Overall fMRI was in agreement with the Wada test in 91.3% of patients, suggesting its utility for clinical use with the proper consideration given to the confounds discussed in this work.
Keywords:Functional neuroimaging    Functional magnetic resonance imaging    Epilepsy    Lateralization    Language    Wada
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