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1.
J Neurosurg Case Lessons ; 5(13)2023 Mar 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37014023

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Apraxia of speech is a disorder of speech-motor planning in which articulation is effortful and error-prone despite normal strength of the articulators. Phonological alexia and agraphia are disorders of reading and writing disproportionately affecting unfamiliar words. These disorders are almost always accompanied by aphasia. OBSERVATIONS: A 36-year-old woman underwent resection of a grade IV astrocytoma based in the left middle precentral gyrus, including a cortical site associated with speech arrest during electrocortical stimulation mapping. Following surgery, she exhibited moderate apraxia of speech and difficulty with reading and spelling, both of which improved but persisted 6 months after surgery. A battery of speech and language assessments was administered, revealing preserved comprehension, naming, cognition, and orofacial praxis, with largely isolated deficits in speech-motor planning and the spelling and reading of nonwords. LESSONS: This case describes a specific constellation of speech-motor and written language symptoms-apraxia of speech, phonological agraphia, and phonological alexia in the absence of aphasia-which the authors theorize may be attributable to disruption of a single process of "motor-phonological sequencing." The middle precentral gyrus may play an important role in the planning of motorically complex phonological sequences for production, independent of output modality.

2.
Curr Biol ; 30(22): 4342-4351.e3, 2020 11 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32888480

RESUMO

The fluent production of a signed language requires exquisite coordination of sensory, motor, and cognitive processes. Similar to speech production, language produced with the hands by fluent signers appears effortless but reflects the precise coordination of both large-scale and local cortical networks. The organization and representational structure of sensorimotor features underlying sign language phonology in these networks remains unknown. Here, we present a unique case study of high-density electrocorticography (ECoG) recordings from the cortical surface of profoundly deaf signer during awake craniotomy. While neural activity was recorded from sensorimotor cortex, the participant produced a large variety of movements in linguistic and transitional movement contexts. We found that at both single electrode and neural population levels, high-gamma activity reflected tuning for particular hand, arm, and face movements, which were organized along dimensions that are relevant for phonology in sign language. Decoding of manual articulatory features revealed a clear functional organization and population dynamics for these highly practiced movements. Furthermore, neural activity clearly differentiated linguistic and transitional movements, demonstrating encoding of language-relevant articulatory features. These results provide a novel and unique view of the fine-scale dynamics of complex and meaningful sensorimotor actions.


Assuntos
Córtex Sensório-Motor/fisiologia , Língua de Sinais , Mapeamento Encefálico/instrumentação , Mapeamento Encefálico/métodos , Neoplasias Encefálicas/cirurgia , Estimulação Elétrica , Eletrocorticografia/instrumentação , Eletrocorticografia/métodos , Eletrodos , Glioblastoma/cirurgia , Humanos , Linguística , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Estudos de Caso Único como Assunto , Estados Unidos
3.
Neurosurgery ; 83(1): 29-37, 2018 07 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28973530

RESUMO

Intracranial electrical recordings and stimulation of neurosurgical patients have been central to the advancement of human neuroscience. The use of these methods has rapidly expanded over the last decade due to theoretical and technical advances, as well as the growing number of neurosurgical patients undergoing functional procedures for indications such as epilepsy, tumor resection, and movement disorders. These methods pose the potential for ethical conflict, as they involve basic neuroscientific research utilizing invasive procedures in human patients undergoing treatment for neurological illnesses. This review addresses technical aspects, clinical contexts, and issues of ethical concern, utilizing a framework that is informed by, but also departs from, existing bioethical literature on matters in clinical research. We conclude with proposals for improving informed consent processes to address potential problems specific to intracranial electrophysiology research, a general schema for scrutinizing research-related risk associated with different methods, and a call for the development of consensus to ensure continuing scientific progress alongside crucial patient protections in this promising area of human neuroscience.


Assuntos
Experimentação Humana/ética , Consentimento Livre e Esclarecido/ética , Monitorização Neurofisiológica Intraoperatória/ética , Procedimentos Neurocirúrgicos/ética , Humanos , Neurociências/ética
4.
Neuroimage ; 153: 273-282, 2017 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28396294

RESUMO

Direct intracranial recording of human brain activity is an important approach for deciphering neural mechanisms of cognition. Such recordings, usually made in patients with epilepsy undergoing inpatient monitoring for seizure localization, are limited in duration and depend on patients' tolerance for the challenges associated with recovering from brain surgery. Thus, typical intracranial recordings, similar to most non-invasive approaches in humans, provide snapshots of brain activity in acute, highly constrained settings, limiting opportunities to understand long timescale and natural, real-world phenomena. A new device for treating some forms of drug-resistant epilepsy, the NeuroPace RNS® System, includes a cranially-implanted neurostimulator and intracranial electrodes that continuously monitor brain activity and respond to incipient seizures with electrical counterstimulation. The RNS System can record epileptic brain activity over years, but whether it can record meaningful, behavior-related physiological responses has not been demonstrated. Here, in a human subject with electrodes implanted over high-level speech-auditory cortex (Wernicke's area; posterior superior temporal gyrus), we report that cortical evoked responses to spoken sentences are robust, selective to phonetic features, and stable over nearly 1.5 years. In a second subject with RNS System electrodes implanted over frontal cortex (Broca's area, posterior inferior frontal gyrus), we found that word production during a naming task reliably evokes cortical responses preceding speech onset. The spatiotemporal resolution, high signal-to-noise, and wireless nature of this system's intracranial recordings make it a powerful new approach to investigate the neural correlates of human cognition over long timescales in natural ambulatory settings.


Assuntos
Eletroencefalografia/métodos , Potenciais Evocados , Percepção da Fala/fisiologia , Lobo Temporal/fisiologia , Adolescente , Adulto , Eletrodos Implantados , Feminino , Ritmo Gama , Humanos , Neuroestimuladores Implantáveis , Telemetria , Tecnologia sem Fio
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