| Literature DB >> 24808889 |
Renato P Munhoz1, Antonio Cerasa2, Michael S Okun3.
Abstract
One of the main indications for stereotactic surgery in Parkinson's disease (PD) is the control of levodopa-induced dyskinesia. This can be achieved by pallidotomy and globus pallidus internus (GPi) deep brain stimulation (DBS) or by subthalamotomy and subthalamic nucleus (STN) DBS, which usually allow for a cut down in the dosage of levodopa. DBS has assumed a pivotal role in stereotactic surgical treatment of PD and, in fact, ablative procedures are currently considered surrogates, particularly when bilateral procedures are required, as DBS does not produce a brain lesion and the stimulator can be programed to induce better therapeutic effects while minimizing adverse effects. Interventions in either the STN and the GPi seem to be similar in controlling most of the other motor aspects of PD, nonetheless, GPi surgery seems to induce a more particular and direct effect on dyskinesia, while the anti-dyskinetic effect of STN interventions is mostly dependent on a reduction of dopaminergic drug dosages. Hence, the si ne qua non-condition for a reduction of dyskinesia when STN interventions are intended is their ability to allow for a reduction of levodopa dosage. Pallidal surgery is indicated when dyskinesia is a dose-limiting factor for maintaining or introducing higher adequate levels of dopaminergic therapy. Also medications used for the treatment of PD may be useful for the improvement of several non-motor aspects of the disease, including sleep, psychiatric, and cognitive domains, therefore, dose reduction of medication withdrawal are not always a fruitful objective.Entities:
Keywords: DBS; Parkinson’s disease; deep brain stimulation; dyskinesia; pallidotomy
Year: 2014 PMID: 24808889 PMCID: PMC4010755 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2014.00065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Patient selection and point to be considered when indicating stereotactic surgery for dyskinesias in Parkinson’s disease.
| Advantages | Disadvantages | Patient profile | Post-operative details | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Efficacious | Permanent lesion | Unable to travel | Ipsilateral dyskinesias may not improve significantly, requiring continuing anti-dyskinetic medical treatment or contralateral GPi DBS | |
| Less costly than DBS | Not reversible | Live where DBS is too expensive or not available Prefer not to have chronic hardware | ||
| Does not require post-operative programming | Bilateral surgery has higher risk of side effects | |||
| No complications related to hardware (infections, malfunction) | Does not allow adjustments to control side effects | High infection risk | ||
| Direct improvement in dyskinesias Allows | No significant change in drug regimen in many but not all cases Ventral and dorsal stimulation may induce opposite effects on cardinal motor signs of PD however this has not been replicable on all cases | Needs prompt improvement of severe dyskinesias | Ensure that the beneficial effect of | |
| Responds to low dose | ||||
| Has | ||||
| Allows significant | Improvements in dyskinesias depend on reduction of levodopa May have negative impact on cognition | Has severe motor fluctuations Uses higher doses of | Stimulation induced dyskinesias may appear after a latency of several hours if | |
| More laborious post-operative management | ||||
| May worsen or not improve dyskinesia in brittle dyskinetics |
Effects of unilateral pallidotomy, bilateral GPi and STN deep brain stimulation (DBS) on general motor improvement (UPDRS III), dyskinesias (UPDRS IV) and levodopa equivalent daily dose (LEDD).
| Motor improvement (%) | Improvement for dyskinesias (%) | Reduction in LEDD | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 25–45 | 45–86 | n.s. (0–10%) | |
| 26–43 | 47–88 | n.s. (15–17%) | |
| 25–54 | 20–83 | 31–47% |
Mean improvement after a minimum of 6 months compared to preoperative baseline. Scores reflect the medication off condition; for DBS, stimulation on. n.s., non-significant (.