A total of 60 patients with lateral ventricular meningiomas were divided into study and control groups (n = 30 each). Diffusion tensor and blood oxygenation level–dependent functional magnetic resonance imaging were used for fiber tracking and eloquent cortex localization, respectively, in the study group. The surgical approach was based on coregistered data sets from 3-D lesion and brain structure reconstructions. Patients in the control group underwent anatomic neuronavigation-guided surgery. The patients' demographics, degree of resection, visual field, language score, movement, preoperative and postoperative Karnofsky Performance Status (KPS) scores, and surgical complications were recorded.
Tumors were completely removed in both groups. Patients in the study group had a higher rate of visual field preservation than controls (P = 0.01). The two groups had similar motor and language functions after surgery, except that fewer cases of transient aphasia were observed in the former (P < 0.05). KPS scores for the study and control groups were 80 (70–80) and 70 (60–70), respectively (P < 0.01), at 2 weeks and 90 (80–100) and 85 (70–90), respectively (P = 0.022), at 3 months after surgery.
Functional neuronavigation preserved neurologic functionality and was especially beneficial for protecting optical functionality and for the rapid recovery of patients.