Affiliation:
1. Key Laboratory of Advanced Technologies of Materials, Ministry of Education, School of Materials Science and Engineering Southwest Jiaotong University Chengdu China
2. Department of Neurosurgery The Affiliated Hospital of Southwest Medical University Luzhou China
3. Huadong Hospital Fudan University Shanghai China
4. Neurosurgery Clinical Medical Research Center of Sichuan Province Luzhou China
5. Neurological Diseases and Brain Function Laboratory Luzhou China
6. Department of Clinical Laboratory Chengdu Women's and Children's Central Hospital Chengdu China
Abstract
AbstractPurposeGlioma patients have varying degrees of psychiatric symptoms, which severely affect the quality of life of patients and their families. The present study investigated the correlation between preoperative psychiatric symptoms and local cerebral perfusion parameters of in glioma patients.Patients and methodsThe depression, anxiety, and cognitive impairment (CI) scores of 39 patients were assessed separately, and all of the patients underwent a preoperative perfusion computed tomography scan.ResultsThis study found that: (1) The incidence of preoperative symptoms of depression, anxiety, and CI was 46.15%, 48.72%, and 25.64%, respectively. (2) Cerebral blood volume (CBV) (lesion‐sided [LS] occipital lobe white matter [WM] and parietal lobe WM and normal‐sided temporal lobe WM), permeability surface (PS) (LS temporal lobe gray matter [GM] and parietal lobe WM) in the depression group were significantly decreased (p < .05). (3) CBV (LS occipital lobe WM), cerebral blood flow (LS parietal lobe GM, centrum ovale and frontal lobe WM and normal‐sided frontal lobe WM, temporal lobe WM and parietal lobe WM), and mean transition time (MTT) (normal‐sided frontal lobe WM and temporal lobe WM) in the anxiety group were significantly increased (p < .05). (4) CBV (LS temporal lobe GM), MTT (LS anterior limb of internal capsule), and PS (LS thalamus) in the CI group were significantly increased (p < .05).ConclusionThis study showed that glioma patients had different levels of psychological distress in glioma patients before surgery, which may be related to the changes in brain perfusion caused by the tumor.