It has been shown through functional MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) that patients with gliomas in eloquent areas have compensated neurological function by virtue of brain post-injury reorganization. Our previous clinical research found that mild sedation could induce and/or exacerbate neurological deficits, especially in limb motor and ataxia function, in these patients presumably by impairing functional compensation,. Nevertheless it is still very unclear how mild sedation affects sensorimotor networks in brains where reorganization may be present. Since eloquent area glioma patients are frequently subjected to sedation, anesthetics, and neurological examinations perioperatively, it is important to investigate how mild sedation interacts with motor network reorganization and functional compensation. Our research in patients with eloquent area gliomas will utilize neurological evaluations and multimodal MRI to explore the changes in brain upper limb' motor network reorganization after mild sedation by different sedatives-anesthetics. The neurological evaluations include sensorimotor function scale and testing tool. Multimodal MRI consists of 3-dimentional structure, blood oxygen-level dependent for cortical activation and diffusion tensor imaging for subcortical conduction. The data from the clinical testing and functional MRI will be processed and analyzed along with other relevant clinical information. This research will answer the question of how mild sedation affects upper limb motor function networks in brains with eloquent area gliomas. This new information will help optimize perioperative anesthetic and sedative choice for patients with eloquent area gliomas.
Age range
25 Years – 60 Years
Sex
ALL
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Brain network connectivity
Timeframe: 2 hours following sedation