The frontal aslant tract and its role in executive functions: a quantitative tractography study in glioma patients

DIFFUSION TRACTOGRAPHY WHITE-MATTER TRACTS LANGUAGE Executive functions Executive Function 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine COGNITIVE CONTROL Neural Pathways Humans BRAIN Original Research Retrospective Studies Brain Mapping Lesion-symptom study ARCUATE FASCICULUS SUPPLEMENTARY MOTOR AREA SPEECH Glioma Glioma patients Magnetic Resonance Imaging FALSE DISCOVERY RATE Frontal Lobe VERBAL FLUENCY Diffusion Tensor Imaging Frontal aslant tract Tractography
DOI: 10.1007/s11682-021-00581-x Publication Date: 2021-10-30T05:03:59Z
ABSTRACT
AbstractFocal white matter lesions can cause cognitive impairments due to disconnections within or between networks. There is some preliminary evidence that there are specific hubs and fiber pathways that should be spared during surgery to retain cognitive performance. A tract potentially involved in important higher-level cognitive processes is the frontal aslant tract. It roughly connects the posterior parts of the inferior frontal gyrus and the superior frontal gyrus. Functionally, the left frontal aslant tract has been associated with speech and the right tract with executive functions. However, there currently is insufficient knowledge about the right frontal aslant tract’s exact functional importance. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of the right frontal aslant tract in executive functions via a lesion-symptom approach. We retrospectively examined 72 patients with frontal glial tumors and correlated measures from tractography (distance between tract and tumor, and structural integrity of the tract) with cognitive test performances. The results indicated involvement of the right frontal aslant tract in shifting attention and letter fluency. This involvement was not found for the left tract. Although this study was exploratory, these converging findings contribute to a better understanding of the functional frontal subcortical anatomy. Shifting attention and letter fluency are important for healthy cognitive functioning, and when impaired they may greatly influence a patient’s wellbeing. Further research is needed to assess whether or not damage to the right frontal aslant tract causes permanent cognitive impairments, and consequently identifies this tract as a critical pathway that should be taken into account during neurosurgical procedures.
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