Review Article
Impact of Postsurgical Disconnection in Aggression Disorder Treatment, Latin American Single Center Experience: A Neuronal Connectomics Analysis
Issue:
Volume 9, Issue 1, June 2025
Pages:
1-9
Received:
14 January 2025
Accepted:
1 February 2025
Published:
20 February 2025
DOI:
10.11648/j.ijn.20250901.11
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Abstract: Recent advancements in the study of human behavior, along with significant technological progress, have provided a more complete understanding of the neural circuits involved in aggressive responses to external stimuli. Notably, aggression as a voluntary behavior differs from reactive aggression in its neural connections and cerebral connectomics. Aggression is identified as part of a series of responses to stimuli that pose a potential threat to an individual’s physical integrity. By identifying the neural pathways involved in pathological aggression, we can modify this behavior by disrupting these pathways through functional neurosurgery. This study aims to demonstrate, through neuronal connectomics, the effects of postsurgical disconnection following functional neurosurgical procedures designed to treat aggression disorders. For many years, brain function was believed to result solely from the activity of specific cortical areas, which conditioned cognitive responses. However, recent advances in neurology, neuroimaging, neuropsychology, and neurosurgery have shifted our understanding of brain function, revealing a more complex network of connectivity. Despite we are now able to predict the location of primary cortical areas, patients may still experience unanticipated deficits in functions like judgment or memory after surgery. This suggests that traditionally silent regions of the brain may be more anatomically intricate and functionally redundant than previously understood. One of the significant advancements in neuroimaging is Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI), which has revolutionized psychiatric surgery, neuroendoscopy, and neuro-oncology. DTI enabled the formation of the Human Connectome Project (HCP), a large-scale initiative that provides detailed data on the brain's connectivity in healthy individuals. The most recent HCP findings have reclassified cortical regions previously described by Brodmann, based on functional connectivity, myelination, and cortical thickness. These advancements contribute to a much more detailed framework for studying brain function and its anatomical organization. This paper explores how these developments in connectomics and neuroimaging are being applied to the understanding and treatment of aggression disorders through functional neurosurgery.
Abstract: Recent advancements in the study of human behavior, along with significant technological progress, have provided a more complete understanding of the neural circuits involved in aggressive responses to external stimuli. Notably, aggression as a voluntary behavior differs from reactive aggression in its neural connections and cerebral connectomics. ...
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