Steady or not following thalamic deep brain stimulation for essential tremor

Deep brain stimulation (DBS) has become an important option for medication-refractory essential tremor (ET), but may contribute to worsened gait and falling. This study evaluates impaired gait in a cohort of patients treated with DBS with a retrospective review of ET patients before and after DBS im...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of neurology 2011-09, Vol.258 (9), p.1643-1648
Hauptverfasser: Hwynn, Nelson, Hass, Christopher J., Zeilman, Pamela, Romrell, Janet, Dai, Yunfeng, Wu, Sam S., Foote, Kelly D., Subramony, S. H., Oyama, Genko, Velez-Lago, Frances, Fernandez, Hubert H., Resnick, Andrew S., Malaty, Irene A., Okun, Michael S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Deep brain stimulation (DBS) has become an important option for medication-refractory essential tremor (ET), but may contribute to worsened gait and falling. This study evaluates impaired gait in a cohort of patients treated with DBS with a retrospective review of ET patients before and after DBS implantation. Factors examined included: age, duration of symptoms, pre-morbid gait difficulties/falls, Fahn-Tolosa-Marin tremorrating scale (TRS) scores at baseline, 6 months post-unilateral DBS implantation, and 6 or 12 months post-bilateral implantation. All implantations targeted the nucleus ventralis intermediate (Vim). Thirty-eight patients (25 males, 13 females) were included. Twenty-five patients (65.8%) underwent unilateral DBS implantation and 13 (34.2%) bilateral. The mean age at surgery was 67.1 years ± 11.4 (range 34–81). The mean disease duration was 31 years ± 18.3 (range 6–67). Fifty-eight percent of patients had worsened gait post-operatively. Seventy percent of patients with unilateral Vim DBS experienced gait worsening while 55% of bilateral DBS patients experienced gait worsening. Patients with worsened gait post-DBS had higher baseline pre-operative TRS scores than those without worsened gait (43.1 points ± 8.4 vs. 33.1 points ± 10.1, p  = 0.002) (odds ratio 2.5, p  = 0.02). Gait/balance may worsen following DBS for medication refractory ET. Higher baseline TRS score may factor into these issues, although a larger prospective study will be required with a control population. The larger percentage of difficulties observed in unilateral versus bilateral cases likely reflected the bias to not proceed to second-sided surgery if gait/balance problems were encountered.
ISSN:0340-5354
1432-1459
DOI:10.1007/s00415-011-5986-0