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Altered brain morphology following long-term survival from early monocular enucleation.

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Date

2015

Authors

Kelly, Krista
DeSimone, Kevin
Gallie, Brenda
Steeves, Jennifer

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

NeuroImage: Clinical

Abstract

Purpose

Retinoblastoma is typically diagnosed before 5 years of age and is often treated by enucleation (surgical removal) of the cancerous eye. Here, we sought to characterize morphological changes of the cortex following long-term survival from early monocular enucleation. Methods

Nine adults with early right-eye enucleation (≤48 months of age) due to retinoblastoma were compared to 18 binocularly intact controls. Surface area, cortical thickness, and gyrification estimates were obtained from T1 weighted images and group differences were examined. Results

Early monocular enucleation was associated with increased surface area and/or gyrification in visual (i.e., V1, inferior temporal), auditory (i.e., supramarginal), and multisensory (i.e., superior temporal, inferior parietal, superior parietal) cortices compared with controls. Visual cortex increases were restricted to the right hemisphere contralateral to the remaining eye, consistent with previous subcortical data showing asymmetrical lateral geniculate nucleus volume following early monocular enucleation. Conclusions

Altered morphological development of visual, auditory, and multisensory regions occurs subsequent to long-time survival from early eye loss.

Description

Keywords

Monocular enucleation, Morphological development, Early visual deprivation, Visual cortex, Brain plasticity, Hemisphere asymmetry

Citation

Kelly, K. R., DeSimone, K., Gallie, B. L., & Steeves, J. (2015). Altered brain morphology following long-term survival from early monocular enucleation. Neuroimage: Clinical, 7, 297-305.