Article Synopsis

  • The study examines whether including music performance during awake mapping is necessary in surgery for lower-grade glioma in professional musicians, given the importance of preserving musical ability.
  • The authors conducted surgeries on three professional musicians without mapping music skills, instead focusing on tailored tests for each patient's critical brain circuits involved in various functions.
  • All patients successfully resumed their musical careers after surgery, suggesting that a connectome-based approach can effectively remove tumors while preserving essential networks related to musical skills and creativity.

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Article Abstract

Objective: In surgery for lower-grade glioma (LGG) in professional musicians, for whom preserving music ability is essential, a critical question has emerged, namely, is it mandatory to include music performance during awake mapping, as proposed in several reports? In fact, music ability is subserved by a mosaic of interactive cognitive and emotional processes that rest on several networks. Therefore, from a meta-network perspective, the authors investigated whether an integrated multimodal monitoring of these cognitive and emotional functions during stimulation mapping could be efficient in maintaining musical skill. Indeed, it could be difficult for a patient to play a musical instrument in the surgical setting in addition to performing other tasks, such as movement and language.

Methods: An awake mapping-guided resection for LGG without intraoperative music performance was performed in 3 professional musicians. Intraoperative tests were tailored to each patient depending on the critical corticosubcortical circuits surrounding the tumor, including not only sensorimotor or language skills but also higher-order functions with a constant multitasking during the resection.

Results: Although music skills were not mapped during surgery, all patients resumed their professional activities, preserving the ability to play music and to perform concerts, to teach and to compose music, or to start learning a new instrument.

Conclusions: A connectome-based resection without intraoperative music performance seems effective in achieving maximal glioma removal while preserving crucial networks subserving musical skills, creativity, and music learning. Neurosurgery should evolve toward a meta-networking approach to better understand higher-order functions mediating complex behavior, such as being a professional musician.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.3171/2023.11.FOCUS23702DOI Listing

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