A2 Refereed review article in a scientific journal
Lesion network mapping for symptom localization: recent developments and future directions
Authors: Joutsa Juho, Corp Daniel T., Fox Michael D.
Publisher: LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
Publication year: 2022
Journal: Current Opinion in Neurology
Journal acronym: CURR OPIN NEUROL
Volume: 35
Issue: 4
First page : 453
Last page: 459
Number of pages: 7
ISSN: 1350-7540
eISSN: 1473-6551
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1097/WCO.0000000000001085
Purpose of review Focal lesions causing specific neurological or psychiatric symptoms can occur in multiple different brain locations, complicating symptom localization. Here, we review lesion network mapping, a technique used to aid localization by mapping lesion-induced symptoms to brain circuits rather than individual brain regions. We highlight recent examples of how this technique is being used to investigate clinical entities and identify therapeutic targets.
Recent findings To date, lesion network mapping has successfully been applied to more than 40 different symptoms or symptom complexes. In each case, lesion locations were combined with an atlas of human brain connections (the human connectome) to map heterogeneous lesion locations causing the same symptom to a common brain circuit. This approach has lent insight into symptoms that have been difficult to localize using other techniques, such as hallucinations, tics, blindsight, and pathological laughter and crying. Further, lesion network mapping has recently been applied to lesions that improve symptoms, such as tremor and addiction, which may translate into new therapeutic targets.
Summary Lesion network mapping can be used to map lesion-induced symptoms to brain circuits rather than single brain regions. Recent findings have provided insight into long-standing clinical mysteries and identified testable treatment targets for circuit-based and symptom-based neuromodulation.