| Literature DB >> 26300844 |
Avram Fraint1, Gian Pal1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Tourette's syndrome (TS) is defined by 1 year of persistent motor and vocal tics. Often, the tics are refractory to conventional pharmacologic and psychobehavioral interventions. In these patients, deep brain stimulation (DBS) may be an appropriate intervention. This paper reviews different DBS targets in TS, discusses existing evidence on the efficacy of DBS in TS, highlights adverse effects of the procedure, discusses indications and patient selection as well as future directions for DBS in TS.Entities:
Keywords: DBS; TS; Tourette’s syndrome; deep brain stimulation; tics
Year: 2015 PMID: 26300844 PMCID: PMC4523794 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2015.00170
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Proposed inclusion and exclusion criteria for DBS use in TS.
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| At least 18 years old. Younger patients would require approval from local ethics committee | Under 18 years old without approval from local ethics committee |
| DSM-V diagnosis of TS | Active suicidal or homicidal ideation |
| Severe tics, as defined by YGTSS >35/50 | Ongoing or recent substance abuse |
| Tics are the main source of disability | Structural lesions on MRI |
| Tics are refractory to three classes of conservative pharmacologic therapy and CBT has been offered | Co-morbid medical or psychiatric conditions that increase the risk of a failed procedure or interference with post-operative management |
| Psychiatric co-morbidities are being treated and are stable for at least 6 months | Malingering, factitious, psychogenictics |
| Stable environment with reliable and stable social supports | |
| Demonstrated adherence to recommended therapies | |
| Neuropsychological profile indicating the patient can tolerate demands of surgery and post-operative follow up schedule |
Figure 1DBS targets in Tourette’s syndrome [Servello et al. (.
Randomized controlled trials of DBS in TS.
| Study | Target | Sample size | Outcomes | Adverse effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Houeto et al. ( | CM–Pf + bilat GPi | 1 | Bilateral thalamic stimulation: 65% reduction in YGTSS, 77% improvement in RVBTS, fewer self-injurious behaviors; Bilateral GPi stimulation: 65% reduction in YGTSS, 67% improvement in RVCTS, fewer self-injurious behaviors, but mood and impulsivity worse compared to bilateral thalamic stimulation | Weight loss |
| Ackermans et al. ( | CM–Spv–Voi | 8 | 49% improvement in YGTSS, 35% improvement in RVTRS | Decreased energy, subjective visual disturbance, one small hemorrhage, persistent nystagmus |
| Maciunas et al. ( | CM–Pf | 5 | 40–67% reduction in RVTRS, 21–70% mean reduction in vocal tics, 43.6% reduction in YGTSS, 43% mean reduction in TSSL | Two patients had tic exacerbation, one patient had acute psychosis |
| Welter et al. ( | CM–Pf + Gpi | 3 | 65–95% improvement In YGTSS with GPi only, 30–64% improvement in YGTSS with CM–Pf only, 43–76% improvement in YGTSS with combined stimulation | Decreased libido with thalamic stimulation; lethargy, nausea and vertigo at high settings of GPi stimulation |
| Kefalopoulou et al. ( | Bilat Gpi | 15 | Mean YGTSS scores were significantly lower at the end of the on-stimulation period (mean improvement 12.4, or 15.3% | Two infections of DBS hardware, one episode of hypomania. All resolved with treatment. |