A relevant and ethical management of DLGG patients can't refrain from taking into account cognitive disorders and proposing, if need be, a specific program of cognitive rehabilitation, to allow patients recovering-or maintaining-the best level of quality of life as possible. The slow-growing and infiltrating character of DLGG makes their associated cognitive disorders particularly amenable to rehabilitation, by potentiating or even constraining the mechanisms of functional brain reorganization within complex large-scale neural networks.
CITATION STYLE
Herbet, G., & Moritz-Gasser, S. (2017). Functional rehabilitation in patients with DLGG. In Diffuse Low-Grade Gliomas in Adults (pp. 595–608). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-55466-2_27
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