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White matter resection and verbal memory deficits after temporal lobe epilepsy surgery

Title: White matter resection and verbal memory deficits after temporal lobe epilepsy surgery
Authors: Binding LP; Giampiccolo D; Ji Y; Fleury M; Liu S; Bianchi L; Miserocchi A; McEvoy AW; Baxendale S; Koepp M; Xiao F; O'Keeffe AG; Sidhu MK; Taylor PN; De Tisi J; Winston GP; Duncan JS; Vos SB
Source: Brain Communications, 2026
Publisher Information: Oxford University Press
Publication Year: 2026
Collection: Newcastle University Library ePrints Service
Description: © The Author(s) 2026. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain.Temporal lobe resection for focal, drug-resistant temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) causes verbal memory deficits in 30% of left hemisphere-operated patients. Structural, functional and computational modelling have shown a widespread structural and functional memory network with hubs in critical brain regions including the hippocampus, subcortical and neocortical regions. We hypothesized that damage to white matter pathways forming a network involving cortical and subcortical regions may be responsible for postoperative memory problems. In this study, we measured verbal memory encoding (immediate recall) and retrieval (delayed recall) outcome at three timepoints (preoperative, 3- and 12-month postoperatively) in 146 left TLE patients who underwent temporal lobe surgery and evaluated the impact of white matter tract section on verbal memory. Outcome was measured by the change in scores from preoperative to 3- and 12-month postoperatively and via the reliable change index. Utilizing resection masks from pre- and postoperative T1 scans, an atlas-based analysis utilizing reconstructions of the ventral cingulum and fornix confirmed these tracts involvement in verbal encoding but not retrieval. Using preoperative diffusion MRI (dMRI) reconstructions with resection masks to estimate the percentage of fibre bundle transection, we found that the ventral cingulum was significantly related to verbal encoding change and the fornix was related to verbal retrieval across both 3- and 12-month timepoints. Investigating volumes of ventral cingulum and fornix from postoperative dMRI reconstruction revealed that greater volume remaining of the ventral cingulum and fornix was related to less decline in verbal encoding but not retrieval. Our results suggest that verbal encoding may be supported by direct and indirect connections between the medial temporal lobe and subcortical regions with memory deficits arising from their transection. Verbal ...
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
File Description: application/pdf
Language: unknown
Relation: https://eprints.ncl.ac.uk/311069; https://eprints.ncl.ac.uk/fulltext.aspx?url=311069/6F3C0EF7-B4DC-490D-9B7D-3C3176175C8F.pdf&pub_id=311069
Availability: https://eprints.ncl.ac.uk/311069
Rights: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Accession Number: edsbas.387C6C37
Database: BASE