• Journal of neurosurgery · Jul 2022

    Connectivity-based thalamus parcellation and surgical targeting of somatosensory subnuclei.

    • Ashley L B Raghu, Sean C Martin, Tariq Parker, Tipu Z Aziz, and Alexander L Green.
    • 1Oxford Functional Neurosurgery, Nuffield Department of Surgical Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom; and.
    • J. Neurosurg. 2022 Jul 1; 137 (1): 209216209-216.

    ObjectiveThe anatomy of the posterolateral thalamus varies substantially between individuals, presenting a challenge for surgical targeting. Patient-specific, connectivity-based parcellation of the thalamus may effectively approximate the ventrocaudal nucleus (Vc). This remains to be robustly validated or assessed as a method to guide surgical targeting. The authors assessed the validity of connectivity-based parcellation for targeting the Vc and its potential for improving clinical outcomes of pain surgery.MethodsA cohort of 19 patients with regional, chronic neuropathic pain underwent preoperative structural and diffusion MRI, then progressed to deep brain stimulation targeting the Vc based on traditional atlas coordinates. Surgical thalami were retrospectively segmented and then parcellated based on tractography estimates of thalamocortical connectivity. The location of each patient's electrode array was analyzed with respect to their primary somatosensory cortex (S1) parcel and compared across patients with reference to the thalamic homunculus.ResultsTen patients achieved long-term pain relief. Sixty-one percent of an average array (interquartile range 42%-74%) was located in the S1 parcel. In patients who achieved long-term benefit from surgery, array location in the individually generated S1 parcels was medial for face pain, centromedial for arm pain, and centrolateral for leg pain. Patients who did not benefit from surgery did not follow this pattern. Standard stereotactic coordinates of electrode locations diverged from this pattern.ConclusionsConnectivity-based parcellation of the thalamus appears to be a reliable method for segmenting the Vc. Identifying the Vc in this way, and targeting mediolaterally as appropriate for the region of pain, merits exploration in an effort to increase the yield of successful surgical procedures.

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