Litcius/Paper detail

Multitarget deep brain stimulation for clinically complex movement disorders

Tariq Parker, Ashley L. B. Raghu, James J. FitzGerald, Alexander L. Green, Tipu Z. Aziz

2020Journal of neurosurgery33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Deep brain stimulation (DBS) of single-target nuclei has produced remarkable functional outcomes in a number of movement disorders such as Parkinson's disease, essential tremor, and dystonia. While these benefits are well established, DBS efficacy and strategy for unusual, unclassified movement disorder syndromes is less clear. A strategy of dual pallidal and thalamic electrode placement is a rational approach in such cases where there is profound, medically refractory functional impairment. The authors report a series of such cases: midbrain cavernoma hemorrhage with olivary hypertrophy, spinocerebellar ataxia-like disorder of probable genetic origin, Holmes tremor secondary to brainstem stroke, and hemiballismus due to traumatic thalamic hemorrhage, all treated by dual pallidal and thalamic DBS. All patients demonstrated robust benefit from DBS, maintained in long-term follow-up. This series demonstrates the flexibility and efficacy, but also the limitations, of dual thalamo-pallidal stimulation for managing axial and limb symptoms of tremors, dystonia, chorea, and hemiballismus in patients with complex movement disorders.

Topics & Concepts

Deep brain stimulationDystoniaMedicineThalamic stimulatorMovement disordersEssential tremorChoreaNeurosciencePhysical medicine and rehabilitationSpinocerebellar ataxiaDyskinesiaParoxysmal dyskinesiaAtaxiaParkinson's diseaseDiseasePsychologyInternal medicinePsychiatryNeurological disorders and treatmentsParkinson's Disease Mechanisms and TreatmentsGenetic Neurodegenerative Diseases