| Literature DB >> 23049695 |
Maria Fiorella Contarino1, Paul F C Groot, Johan N van der Meer, Lo J Bour, Johannes D Speelman, Aart J Nederveen, Pepijn van den Munckhof, Marina A J Tijssen, Peter Rick Schuurman, Anne-Fleur van Rootselaar.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Functional MRI combined with electromyography (EMG-fMRI) is a new technique to investigate the functional association of movement to brain activations. Thalamic stereotactic surgery is effective in reducing tremor. However, while some patients have satisfying benefit, others have only partial or temporary relief. This could be due to suboptimal targeting in some cases. By identifying tremor-related areas, EMG-fMRI could provide more insight into the pathophysiology of tremor and be potentially useful in refining surgical targeting.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23049695 PMCID: PMC3462183 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0046234
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Clinical and demographical characteristics of the patients included in the study, at the time of scanning.
| Patient | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | Average±SD | |||
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| M | M | M | F | M | M | ||||
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| 79 | 77 | 75 | 48 | 83 | 50 | 69±15 | |||
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| 64 | 51 | 16 | 6 | 14 | 43 | 32±23 | |||
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| 15 | 26 | 58 | 43 | 68 | 8 | 36±24 | |||
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| L | L | L | L | L | L | ||||
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| R | R | R | R | R | R | ||||
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| 1 | 9 | 8 | 10 | 9 | 4 months | 6±4 | |||
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| 19 | 64 | 67 | 23 | 37 | 20 | 38.3±22 | |||
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| −5 | na | −4 | −7 | −6 | −3 | −5 | |||
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| 0 P0 D | 0 P0 D | 0 P1 D | 0 P1 D | 1 P0 D | 0 P0 D | 0.2±0.40.3±0.5 | |||
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| 0 P2 D | 1 P2 D | 1 P3 D | 0 P2 D | 1 P3 D | 0 P1 D | 0.5±0.52.2±0.8 | |||
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| none | none | none | Transient dysarthria | Dysarthria, Babinski R, gait ataxia | none | ||||
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| EFL-EFR | FDIL-FDI R | EFL-BICEPS R | FDIL-ECR R | FDIL-FCRR | ECRL-FDI R | ||||
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| 4–7 Hz | 3–6 Hz | 2–6 Hz | 4–8 Hz | 3–7 Hz | 3–6 Hz | ||||
M, male; F, female; SD, standard deviation; ETRS, essential tremor rating scale;
Change in total score of item 5 of the ETRS with respect to preoperative score (negative indicates improvement);
Items 5 and 6 of the ETRS scored only with arms stretched, similarly to the scanning task; P, proximal; D, distal; EMG, electromyography, L, Left; R, right; EF, extensor of the finger; FDI, first dorsal interosseus; ECR, extensor carpi radialis; FCR, flexor carpi radialis; na, not available.
Figure 1Spectrograms of EMG recorded during “Tremor” protocol.
Spectrograms of the continuous simultaneous EMG recording from the Extensor of the fingers (EF) of the left (top panel) and right arm (bottom panel), during the conditions rest, left arm stretching (L stretch), right arm stretching (R stretch), and both arms stretching (B stretch) in patient No.1. The color bar on the right of the figure indicates power intensity going from low (deep blue) to high (red). A clear increase in the tremor frequency range is visible as an orange band between 4 and 6 Hz on the left EF spectrogram, during extension of the arms and fingers inducing postural tremor (conditions L stretch and B stretch). No increase in power in the tremor frequency is visible on the right EF spectrogram.
Figure 2Single-subject analysis for protocol “Tremor” with the “Circuit mask”.
The right hemisphere is represented on the right (“neurological view”). SPM t-contrasts, superimposed on the subjects’ own T1, are shown at a threshold of p<.001 uncorrected. For patient No. 2 and 4, Left EMG, no activity was seen at this threshold: for explorative purpose, these scans are shown at a threshold of p<.005 (p value indicated in the figure above the corresponding images). The crosshair points to the global maxima. Panels on the left show activity related to left EMG during left arm stretching (non-operated side). Ipsilateral cerebellar activation is present in all the patients except for patient 5. In four patients (No. 1, 3, 4, and 6) this represented the maximal activity, while in patient No. 2 the maximal activity was in the right caudate. In patient No. 5 the maximal activity was located in the right cerebellum and there was no clear activation of the left cerebellum. Panels on the right show activity related to right EMG during right arm stretching (operated side). Ipsilateral cerebellar activation is present in all patients. In patient No. 4 activity was maximal in the right caudate and in patient No. 2 in the left putamen.
Figure 3Single-subjects analysis for protocol “Tremor” with masking on the thalamus area.
The right hemisphere is represented on the right (“neurological view”). SPM t-contrasts, superimposed on the subjects’ own T1, are shown at a threshold of p<.001 uncorrected. For patient No. 1 and No. 4, Left EMG, no activity was seen at this threshold: for explorative purpose these scans are shown at a threshold of p<.005 and p<.05 respectively (p value indicated in the figure above the corresponding images). The crosshair points to the global maxima. Panels on the left show activity related to left EMG during left arm stretching. Contralateral thalamic activation was present in the thalamic dorsal complex (No.1 and 6) or in the posterior thalamic region (No. 2 and 4). In patients No.3 and No. 5 there was no activation. Panels on the right show activity related to right EMG during right arm stretching. There was no thalamic activation in patients No. 1, 3, 5, and 6. In patient No. 2 and 4, bilateral thalamic activation was present, with global maxima in the left posterior thalamus (No.2) and in the right thalamic dorsal complex (No.4).