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Selective Amobarbital Test for the Determination of Language Function in Patients with Epilepsy with Frontal and Posterior Temporal Brain Lesions
Authors:Marketa Hajek,Anton Valavanis,TYasuhiro Yonekawa&dagger  ,Regula Schiess,Alfred Buck&Dagger  ,Heinz Gregor Wieser
Affiliation:Departments of Neurology, Neuroradiology, University Hospital Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland;Departments of Neurosurgery, University Hospital Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland;Departments of Nuclear Medicine, University Hospital Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
Abstract:Summary: Purpose: Selective amobarbital tests with selective temporary inactivation of the left frontal operculum and/or the left parietotemporal cortex were performed in 5 patients with left-hemispheric epileptogenic lesions in or adjacent to classical Broca's and/or Wemicke's aréa. The aim was to assess language functions in these brain regions before surgery, to tailor the surgery according to the individual functional importance of these brain regions, and to predict postoperative outcome. Methods: Amobarbital was injected by transfemoral selective catheterization of the arteries supplying the target areas. Along with neuropsychological and neurological testing during the amobarbital procedure, EEG recordings were performed in all patients, and [199mTc]HMPAO-single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) in 2 patients. Results: After the amobarbital injection into the left frontal opercular region, there was no recognizable language dysfunction in 3 patients. In these 3 patients, the lesions in or adjacent to the frontal operculum were completely resected without postoperative language impairment. In the remaining 2 patients, temporary language impairment after the amobarbital injection into the left frontoopercular and Wemicke's region, respectively, suggested language functions in these areas. Surgery was restricted to the left mesiotemporal lobe in 1 patient. In the other patient, the tumor infiltrating the frontal operculum was restrictively resected. Postoperatively, the fist patient had no language impairment, but the latter had transient global aphasia, from which she recovered. Conclusions: Selective temporary amobarbital inactivation of brain regions that may be associated with language has clearly indicated the presence or absence of language functions in these regions. The test contributed substantially to planning of the surgical approach in each patient. The predictive alue of the amobarbital test was demonstrated by the postoperative outcome.
Keywords:Language representation    Selective amobarbital memory test    Selective amobarbital language test    Presurgical epilepsy evaluation    [99mTc]HMPAO single photon emission computed tomography
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