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P.114 When functional neuroimaging is ambiguous for language localization: a case for Wada testing

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2023

A Zhou
Affiliation:
(Saskatoon)
L Hnenny
Affiliation:
(Saskatoon)
J Neudorf
Affiliation:
(Saskatoon)
S Kress
Affiliation:
(Saskatoon)
R Borowsky
Affiliation:
(Saskatoon)
L Gould
Affiliation:
(Saskatoon)*
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Abstract

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Background: To localize cortical speech areas, methods such as fMRI are commonly used, but the Wada test can also determine whether a region is critical to the particular task. We report a case of a left-handed patient with a left frontal tumour in whom fMRI language paradigms produced both left and right Broca’s and Wernicke’s areas. Methods: All imaging used a 3 Tesla Siemens Skyra scanner. The patient performed five speech tasks: word reading, picture naming, semantic questions, pseudohomophone reading, and word generation. All preprocessing and statistical analyses for functional images were performed using Brain Voyager QX. Results: The fMRI results revealed right hemisphere dominance for language processing. A Wada test was performed in order to confirm whether the regions in the left hemisphere were critical to speech. The patient experienced speech arrest during the Wada test, thus confirming that despite bilateral speech activation, the left hemisphere speech regions are required for speech production. Conclusions: This case emphasizes the importance of preoperative fMRI in assessing the location of eloquent cortices adjacent to a tumour and the Wada test is still warranted for examining necessity of left hemisphere language regions when fMRI fails to show clear left-lateralization.

Type
Abstracts
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Canadian Neurological Sciences Federation