| Literature DB >> 31507514 |
Erich Talamoni Fonoff1,2, Andrea C de Lima-Pardini3, Daniel Boari Coelho4,5, Bernardo Assumpção Monaco2,6, Birajara Machado1, Carolina Pinto de Souza2, Maria Gabriela Dos Santos Ghilardi1,2, Clement Hamani7.
Abstract
Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) has been used for the treatment of chronic pain for nearly five decades. With a high degree of efficacy and a low incidence of adverse events, it is now considered to be a suitable therapeutic alternative in most guidelines. Experimental studies suggest that SCS may also be used as a therapy for motor and gait dysfunction in parkinsonian states. The most common and disabling gait dysfunction in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) is freezing of gait (FoG). We review the evolution of SCS for gait disorders from bench to bedside and discuss potential mechanisms of action, neural substrates, and clinical outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Parkinson's disease; freezing of gait; gait; pain; spinal cord stimulation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31507514 PMCID: PMC6718563 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2019.00905
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Characteristic motor patterns associated with freezing of gait in Parkinson's disease. (A) Patients exhibit dysfunction prior to or during freezing of gait. Note that these variables are recorded in different tasks: impairment of APA occurs prior to step initiation; altered cadence and stride length during gait, and disorders of angular displacement of the knee during the so-called trembling knees. The central dotted line of the satellite plot represents patients without freezing of gait (nFoG) data. Deviations along the axes radiating from the center of the plot represent the percentage in which patients with freezing of gait (FoG) differ from nFoG (blue line). (B) Representation of the step initiation task. The panel on the top represents the sequence of the events during step initiation. The red arrow shows the shifting of body weight before moving the opposite foot forward. The curves on the middle and bottom show the CoPml (red curve) and malleolus displacement (dotted line). The upper curves represent a normal stepping eliciting one APA before the leg movement. The lower curves represent multiple and longer APAs usually seen during FoG episodes. The hatched area are APAs (time from the increasing of mediolateral force to the step onset).
Figure 2Representation of brain dynamics in three conditions during which patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) were assessed. The results describe the contrast between patients with or without freezing of gait (FoG+ > FoG–). Blue regions are those for which available evidence shows less activity in FoG+ than in FoG–; green indicates regions with higher and lower activity in FoG+; red represents regions in which activity was higher in FoG+ than FoG–. Traces indicate connections between two regions (red: higher; blue: lower in FoG+). White regions are those involved in brain circuits (connectivity studies) without representation of level of the activity between FoG+ and FoG–. AMD, amygdala; BG, basal ganglia; BS, brainstem; CC, calcarine cortex; DLPFC, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; GPi, internal globus pallidus; IFG, inferior frontal gyrus; INS, insula; M1, primary motor cortex; MLR, mesencephalic locomotor region; MTG, middle temporal gyrus; OC, orbitofrontal cortex; PC, precuneus; PF, prefrontal cortex; PM, premotor cortex; PP, posterior parietal cortex; S2, secondary somatosensory cortex; SMA, supplementary motor area; STN, subthalamic nucleus.
Figure 3(A) Example of parallel changes in local field potential (LFP) power and neuronal firing rate in multiple structures of the cortico-basal ganglia-thalamic loop during high frequency spinal cord stimulation (SCS). Note the immediate reduction of low-frequency oscillations (beta band) in response to SCS (red bar, stimulation frequency: 4 Hz; color codes denote decibels above pink noise background for LFPs). (B) Average LFP spectra for all recording sessions normalized to pink noise showing a significant SCS-induced reduction in LFP beta-power in all structures, except the globus pallidus externus (GPe). Shaded area denotes 95% CI with 100 bootstraps. (C) Standardized neuronal firing rate response to different SCS frequencies in multiple structures of the basal ganglia circuits (neurons rank ordered according to responses). Note that most significant changes in neuron firing were achieved at higher frequencies. M1, primary motor cortex; Put, putamen; VPL, thalamus ventroposterior nucleus; VL, thalamus ventrolateral nucleus; STN, subthalamic nucleus; Gpi, globus pallidus internus. Adapted with permission from Santana et al. (3) (Figures 2A,B, 3A).
Figure 4(A) Schematic illustration of a transverse section of the thoracic spinal cord; the upper part of the figure shows the position of structures in white (white background) and gray matter (gray gradient); 1. Gracile fasciculus of Goll; 2 Cuneate fasciculus of Burdarch (dorsal column); 3. Lissauer's tract; 4. Semilunar tract (Schultz's comma); 5. Thoracic nucleus of Clarke; 6. Intermediate column; 7. Posterior spinocerebellar tract; 8. Anterior spinocerebellar tract; 9. Lateral spinothalamic tract; 10. Anterior spinothalamic tract; 11. Spino-olivary tract; 12. Spinotectal tract; 13. Tectospinal tract; 14. Anterior corticospinal tract; 15. Reticulospinal tract; 16. Anterior vestibulospinal tract; 17. Olivo-spinal tract; 18. Anterior column (Gray matter); 19. Reticular formation of the spinal cord; 20. Lateral corticospinal tract; 21. Lateral vestibulospinal tract; 22. Rubro spinal tract; Lamina of Rexed (I to X–gray matter). (B) Representation of the spinal cord in longitudinal axis showing the cervical and lumbar enlargements and the respective transverse sections and the distance from the dura to the surface of the cord at different levels. Somatotopy abbreviations; C, cervical; Th, thoracic; L, lumbar; S, sacral; C6, sixth cervical level; Th2, second thoracic level; Th9, ninth thoracic level; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid. Adapted with permission from de Souza et al. (68).
Studies approaching SCS as a treatment of motor symptoms and gait disorders in Parkinson's disease.
| Evaluations/ | ||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thevathasan et al. ( | 2 | NA | No | Quadripolar and octopolar; cylindrical | High cervical | 130 and 300 Hz | 240 and 200 μs | Tonic Supra threshold and sub threshold for each patient | Night withdrawal | 10 day PO/None | Acute double blind crossover between two conditions (supra and sub threshold) with a washout of 20 min. | 0% | Timed 10 m walk: no improvement | Timed hand arm movements: 0% |
| Agari et al. ( | 15 | 17.2 | Seven cases | Quadripolar and octopolar; cylindrical | T7–T12 | 5–20 Hz | 210–330 μs | NA | On med | Baseline, 3 and 12 months/12 months | Case series (prospective) | 19.5% at 3 months | Timed 10 m walk: improvement of 9.2% at 3 and 2.1% at 12 months. | Postural improvement at 3 months 25%; at 12 months 9% |
| Pinto de Souza et al. ( | 4 | 21.2 | Four cases (mean 7.8 years before SCS) | Three columns (5-6-5); paddle | T2–T4 | 300 Hz | 90 μs | Tonic 105% of the threshold for paraesthesia | 12 h withdrawal | Baseline, 1, 3, and 6 months/6 months | Case series (prospective)/ | 36.8% at 1 month | 20 m walk: improvement of 58% on time and 65.7% on steps numbers at 6 months. | PDQ 39: improvement of 44.7% at 6 months. |
| Samotus et al. ( | 5 | No | Double octopolar; cylindrical | T8–T10 | 30–60 Hz | 200–500 μs | Tonic Supra threshold for paraesthesia | On med | Baseline, 4, 6 months/6 months | Case series (prospective)/11 frequencies and pulse width different combinations for each patient. | 33.4% at 6 months | Stride length: increase of 38.9% at 6 months. | FOG: improvement in 26.8%. at 6 months. | |
| Kobayashi et al. ( | 1 | 3 | No | Double octopolar; cylindrical | Th6–Th8 | Burst | Burst | NA | 14 days after Burst SCS/None | Case report | 70% after 14 days | 20 m walk: improvement of 25% on time and 28% on steps numbers. | Sagittal vertical axis improvement of 25%. | |
| de Lima-Pardini et al. ( | 12 h withdrawal | Three conditions | 300 Hz SCS improved APA (time and amplitude) and reduced time of Fog. | |||||||||||
| Hubsch et al. ( | 5 | 14.8 | 1 patient (no details) | Octopolar; cylindrical | Th 10-Th 11 | 100 Hz | 300 μs | Tonic Supra threshold for paraesthesia | On /Off Med | 60 days | Case series (prospective)/ | On SCS 23% | Stand-walk-sit test | FoG-Q–no improvement |
This study was an extension of study 3.