4.6 Article

Constant Multi-Tasking With Time Constraint to Preserve Across-Network Dynamics Throughout Awake Surgery for Low-Grade Glioma: A Necessary Step to Enable Patients Resuming an Active Life

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ONCOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2022.924762

Keywords

awake brain surgery; brain connectome; cognitive monitoring; electrostimulation mapping; low-grade glioma; multitasking; neural networks; neuroplasticity

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Awake surgery for brain gliomas improves surgical resection and reduces postoperative complications. In addition to preventing hemiparesis and aphasia, awake surgery should also consider patients' cognitive and emotional functions. By implementing more tasks and exploring inter-network communication, higher-order functions can be monitored more accurately, and the surgical onco-functional balance can be tailored based on each patient's expectations, enabling them to resume an active life.
Awake surgery for brain gliomas improves resection while minimizing morbidity. Although intraoperative mapping was originally used to preserve motor and language functions, the considerable increase of life expectancy, especially in low-grade glioma, resulted in the need to enhance patients' long-term quality of life. If the main goal of awake surgery is to resume normal familial and socio-professional activities, preventing hemiparesis and aphasia is not sufficient: cognitive and emotional functions must be considered. To monitor higher-order functions, e.g., executive control, semantics or mentalizing, further tasks were implemented into the operating theater. Beyond this more accurate investigation of function-specific neural networks, a better exploration of the inter-system communication is required. Advances in brain connectomics led to a meta-network perspective of neural processing, which emphasizes the pivotal role of the dynamic interplay between functional circuits to allow complex and flexible, goal-directed behaviors. Constant multi-tasking with time constraint in awake patients may be proposed during intraoperative mapping, since it provides a mirror of the (dys)synchronization within and across neural networks and it improves the sensitivity of behavioral monitoring by increasing cognitive demand throughout the resection. Electrical mapping may hamper the patient to perform several tasks simultaneously whereas he/she is still capable to achieve each task in isolation. Unveiling the meta-network organization during awake mapping by using a more ecological multi-demand testing, more representative of the real-life conditions, constitutes a reliable way to tailor the surgical onco-functional balance based upon the expectations of each patient, enabling him/her to resume an active life with long-lasting projects.

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