| Literature DB >> 30090757 |
Byung-Chul Son1,2, Young-Min Shon3, Seong Hoon Kim4, Jiyeon Kim5, Hak-Cheol Ko1, Jin-Gyu Choi1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND ANDEntities:
Keywords: Anterior thalamic nucleus; Centromedian nucleus; Deep brain stimulation; Epilepsy; Thalamus
Year: 2018 PMID: 30090757 PMCID: PMC6066694 DOI: 10.14581/jer.18003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Epilepsy Res ISSN: 2233-6249
Demographics and causes of mistargeting in the deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the thalamus
| Patient no. | Age/sex disease | Target, initial | Side, misplaced | Diagnostic modalities to determine mistargeting | Direct cause of misplacement | Possible cause of misplacement | Revision | Verification after revision | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||||||
| EEG (DR) | CT | MRI | ||||||||
| Cases with ANT/CM DBS performed in our hospital | ||||||||||
| 1 | 20/M | bil. ANT | Rt. | Rt.; no DR | Non-diagnostic for artefact | Diagnostic | Anatomical targeting | (+), Rt. side, G/A | CT/MRI fusion | |
| 2 | 36/F | bil. CM | Rt./Lt. | No DR | Diagnostic | Diagnostic | Brain shift | Brain malformation | (+), bil. side, G/A | O-arm iCT |
| 3 | 29/F | bil. CM | Rt./Lt. | No DR | Diagnostic | Diagnostic | Brain shift | Asymmetric brain | (+), bil. ANT, G/A | CT/MRI fusion |
| Cases of ANT DBS performed at another hospital, with misplacement identified during follow-up. | ||||||||||
| 4 | 32/F | bil. ANT, 5 yrs | Lt. | N/A | N/A | Diagnostic | Transventricular lead implantation | Anatomical targeting | (+), Lt. ANT to CM | CT |
| 5 | 48/F | bil. ANT, 5 yrs | Lt. | N/A | N/A | Diagnostic | Transventricular lead implantation | Brain malformation schizencephaly, ventriculomegaly | (+), Lt. ANT to CM | CT/MRI fusion |
| 6 | 57/M | bil. ANT, 8 yrs | Lt. | N/A | Non-diagnostic | Diagnostic | Transventricular hydrocephalus | Brain atrophy, hydrocephalus | Removal Lt. ANT reinsertion, Lt. ANT | CT/MRI fusion |
EEG, electroencephalography; CT, computed tomography; G/A, general anesthesia; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; ANT, anterior nucleus of the thalamus; CM, centromedian nucleus; M, male; bil., bilateral; hippo, hippocampus; iCT, intraoperative computed tomography; TLE, temporal lobe epilepsy; DE, depth electrode; Rt., right; DR, driving response; F, female; Lt., left; CPS, complex partial seizure; FLE, frontal lobe epilepsy; yrs, years.
Figure 1Misplacement of the right electrode targeted to the anterior nucleus of the thalamus (ANT), within the third ventricle (patient #1). (A) An axial computed tomographic (CT) image showing the location of bilateral electrodes (arrows) targeted to the ANT. It is difficult to confirm the exact location of two, closely situated, metallic artifacts. Arrowheads indicate metallic artifacts from bilateral hippocampal depth electrodes simultaneously implanted during ANT deep brain stimulation. (B) A three-dimensional-reconstructed, coronal CT image showing bilateral electrodes for ANT (arrows). It is difficult to verify the location of electrodes. Arrowheads indicate bilateral hippocampal depth electrodes. (C) A T2-weighted, axial magnetic resonance image (MRI) clearly showing misplacement of the right electrode (arrow) within the ventricle. A small, round, low signal intensity indicates the electrode (arrow). An arrowhead indicates the left electrode within the ANT. (D) A T2-weighted, coronal MRI showing misplacement of the right electrode (arrow) within the ventricle (arrowhead).
Figure 2Misplacement of bilateral electrodes targeted for the centromedian nucleus (CM) of the thalamus (patient #2). (A) An axial computed tomographic (CT) image showing bilaterally misplaced electrodes aimed for the CM. Note the significant pneumocephalus (arrow) following electrode implantation, indicating an intraoperative brain shift. (B) A coronal magnetic resonance image (MRI) image showing significant asymmetry of the thalamus. The right thalamus is significantly smaller than the left. Arrows indicate the misplaced electrodes. Individual anatomical variation from congenital anomaly and intraoperative brain shift were thought to be the cause of misplacement.
Figure 3Misplacement of left electrode, targeted to the anterior nucleus of the thalamus (ANT), within the third ventricle (patient #6). (A) An axial CT images showing bilateral electrodes for the ANT. It may appear that the electrodes are well placed within the bilateral ANT (left). Arrows indicate transventricular trajectory of electrode implantation (right). (B) Axial (left) and coronal (right) magnetic resonance image (MRI) images showing the location of the bilateral electrodes. The left electrode (arrows) is placed within the lateral and third ventricles. Only the distal two contacts of the right electrode (arrowheads) are placed within the ANT.
Reported strategies to improve image-guided targeting of the ANT with improved delineation on the MRI
| Authors, year | Methods | Target | MRI | Findings and comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Buentjen et al, | 3T MRI, MPRAGE | AV subnucleus | Siemens, Germany, T1 MPRAGE sequence | More anterior approach for ANT |
| Möttönen et al, | 3T MRI, STIR | ANT | Siemens, Germany, 3D-T1, T2 axial, STIR | ANT delineation by enveloping structures of MTT and EML MER (single tract) not helpful without 3T MRI successful outcome; more anterior ANT |
| Lehtimäki et al, | 3T MRI, STIR | AM, Apr, ANT | same as those of Möttönen et al. | More anterior and superior contact; effective |
| Wu et al, | AM, AV | More thalamic atrophy; poor outcome |
AM, anteromedial subnucleus of ANT; ANT, anterior nucleus of the thalamus; Apr, anterior principal subnucleus of ANT; AV, anteroventral subnucleus of ANT; EML, external medullary lamina; MPRAGE, magnetization-prepared rapid acquisition of gradient echo; MER, microelectrode recording; MTT, mammillothalamic tract; STIR, short tau inversion recovery.