Litcius/Paper detail

Metabolic lesion-deficit mapping of human cognition

Ashwani Jha, Rute Teotónio, April-Louise Smith, Jamshed Bomanji, John Dickson, Beate Diehl, John S. Duncan, Parashkev Nachev

2020Brain15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In theory the most powerful technique for functional localization in cognitive neuroscience, lesion-deficit mapping is in practice distorted by unmodelled network disconnections and strong 'parasitic' dependencies between collaterally damaged ischaemic areas. High-dimensional multivariate modelling can overcome these defects, but only at the cost of commonly impracticable data scales. Here we develop lesion-deficit mapping with metabolic lesions-discrete areas of hypometabolism typically seen on interictal 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose PET imaging in patients with focal epilepsy-that inherently capture disconnection effects, and whose structural dependence patterns are sufficiently benign to allow the derivation of robust functional anatomical maps with modest data. In this cross-sectional study of 159 patients with widely distributed focal cortical impairments, we derive lesion-deficit maps of a broad range of psychological subdomains underlying affect and cognition. We demonstrate the potential clinical utility of the approach in guiding therapeutic resection for focal epilepsy or other neurosurgical indications by applying high-dimensional modelling to predict out-of-sample verbal IQ and depression from cortical metabolism alone.

Topics & Concepts

CognitionLesionNeurosciencePsychologyMedicineCognitive psychologyPathologyDiet and metabolism studiesFunctional Brain Connectivity StudiesDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research