| Literature DB >> 35651920 |
Grace Hey1, Wei Hu1, Joshua Wong1, Takashi Tsuboi2, Matthew R Burns1, Adolfo Ramirez-Zamora1.
Abstract
Holmes Tremor (HT) is an irregular, slow-frequency (<4.5 Hz) tremor characterized by a combination of resting, postural, and action tremors mostly of the upper extremities. Symptoms of HT typically emerge 4 weeks to 2 years after a brain injury caused by a spectrum of etiologies. HT pathophysiology is thought to result from aberrant collateral axonal sprouting and synaptic dysfunction following neuronal damage. To date, the dopaminergic nigrostriatal system, cerebello-thalamo-cortical pathway, and dentate-rubro-olivary pathway have all been implicated in the clinical manifestations of HT. The diversity of HT etiologies usually requires a personalized treatment plan. Current treatment options include carbidopa-levodopa, levetiracetam, and trihexyphenidyl, and surgical management such as deep brain stimulation in selected medication-refractory patients. In this review we discuss the pathophysiology, etiology, neuroimaging, and the latest clinical guidelines for care and management of HT. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Holmes tremor; midbrain tremor; rubral tremor
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35651920 PMCID: PMC9138737 DOI: 10.5334/tohm.683
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tremor Other Hyperkinet Mov (N Y) ISSN: 2160-8288
DBS outcomes for patients with HT in the literature.
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| AUTHORS | PATIENTS AND ETIOLOGIES | DBS TARGETS | OUTCOMES | FOLLOW-UPS |
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| Bargiotas et al. (2021) | Four patients (cerebellar stroke, stroke of the left lateral thalamus and the internal capsule, mesencephalic hemorrhage due to a cavernous malformation, or pontomesencephalic/thalamic strokes) | VIM or DRTT | 34–61% improvement in total TRS. Tremor improvement was lost in three years in three patients but sustained up to nine years in one patient. | Mean length of followup: 5 years |
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| Cenzato et al. (2021) | Three patients who underwent resection of brainstem cavernomas | VIM for one patient, not described for two patients | Complete or almost complete tremor regression in all cases | N/A |
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| Parker et al. (2021) | Hematoma in the right midbrain and cerebral peduncle | Left VIM + GPi | TRS 70% reduction in tremor | 10 years |
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| Ghanchi et al. (2020) | Immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome due to highlyactive antiretroviral therapy for HIV infection (symptoms for 6 months) | Left VIM | Significant tremor improvement in the right arm | 6 months |
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| Razmkon et al. (2020) | Posttraumatic HT (symptoms for 6 years) | Right VIM | The patient experienced complete tremor suppression after DBS but developed localized infection. A rescue lesion through the implanted lead before explanting the DBS system controlled tremor well | 3 years |
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| O’Shea et al. (2020) | Right medial cerebral peduncle and bilateral thalamic strokes (symptoms for 2 years) | Right Vim + Zi | Clear improvement in tremors bilaterally | N/A |
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| Dec-wiek et al. (2019) | Three patients (one with multiple sclerosis and two with ischemic stroke) (symptoms for 1–39 years) | PSA | TRS 56% reduction in tremor | 1 year |
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| Morishita et al. (2019) | Two patients (one with stroke and one with severe head trauma) (symptoms for 3 years) | VIM | TRS motor 52% reduction | 6 months |
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| Yuk et al. (2019) | Brainstem hemorrhage (symptoms for 3 months) | Left VIM | TRS part A 75% reduction | 3 years |
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| Martinez et al. (2018) | HIV-related vasculopathy associated with toxoplasmosis | Right Raprl | Robust and stable improvement in tremor | 2 years |
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| Aydın et al. (2017) | Posttraumatic HT | Left VIM + GPi | TRS > 80% tremor improvement | 6 months |
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| Toda et al. (2017) | Posttraumatic HT | VO + subthalamic region | While individual stimulation of each target was ineffective, an interleaved dual stimulation of both targets was effective | 6 years |
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| Ramirez-Zamora et al. (2016) | Pontine and midbrain hemorrhage secondary to rupture of arteriovenous fistula (symptoms for 7 years) | Left GPi | 80% improvement in TRS right hand score | 6 months |
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| Kilbane et al. (2015) [ | 1. Right brainstem hemorrhage due to cavernous malformation 2.Multicystic brainstem tegmentum lesions 3.Left thalamic midbrain bullet fragment 4.Right thalamic/subthalamic infarction | Patient 1 had VIM/VOA and Gpi leads. Patient 2 and 4 had unilateral Gpi. Patient 3 had VIM/Gpi | TRS improved from a mean 53.25 points prior to surgery to 11.25% representing a 78.87% benefit | Mean length of followup: 33.7 months. |
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| Espinoza-Martinez et al. (2015) [ | Two patients with ICH due to cavernous malformations, four patients with cerebral infarction, two patients with ICH, and two patients with MS | Six with unilateral Gpi, one with bilateral Gpi, one with bilateral VIM, and two with unilateral VIM | 64% mean modified TRS improvement | Mean length of followup: 5.8 years |
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| Follett et al. (2014) [ | Posttraumatic HT (symptoms for 15 years) | Bilateral VIM | Reduction of tremor from a score of 3 to a score of 1 in the right arm and from 3.5 to 0 in the left arm (TETRAS scale) | 12 months |
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| Grabska et al. (2014) [ | Ischemic left thalamic stroke (symptoms 30 years) | Contralateral VOA and Zi | TRS 73% reduction in tremor | 4 years |
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| Kobayashi et al. (2014) [ | 1. Brainstem thalamus hemorrhage (symptoms for 6 years) 2. Cerebral infarction (symptoms for 3 years) 3. Intracerebral midbrain hemorrhage (symptoms 8 months) 4. Posttraumatic (symptoms for 2 years) | Four patients with dual-lead stimulation of ventralis oralis/ventralis intermedius nuclei (VO/VIM) and PSA | 87% mean improvement in tremor | 25 months |
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| Castrop et al. (2013) [ | 1.Hypertensive mesencephalic hemorrhage (symptoms for 1 year) 2.pontomesencephalic AVM hemorrhage (symptoms for 2 years) | Contralateral VIM | Good tremor suppression, whereas the other symptoms remained unchanged | 7 years and 6 years, respectively |
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| Issar et al. (2013) [ | One patient with posttraumatic tremor (symptoms for 6 months) with associated dystonia and cerebellar and cognitive difficulties. | Bilateral VIM | Partial benefit (CGI scale 3). No TRS available. Dystonia persisted | N/A |
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| Aydin et al. (2013) | Midbrain and pons bleeded cavernoma | Right VIM + GPi | 68% improvement in TRS left hand score | 6 months |
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| Acar et al. (2010) [ | Subarachnoid hemorrhage (symptoms less than 1 month) | Bilateral VIM | No tremor and reduction in disability due to tremor | 3 months |
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| Sanborn et al. (2009) | Midbrain cystic degeneration | Right VIM | Full tremor suppression | 2 years |
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| Bandt et al. (2008) [ | Left midbrain cerebral infarction (symptoms for 7 months) | Left lenticular fasciculus | Almost complete resolution of postural and intention tremors; scored 1/4 on the WHIGET | 16 months |
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| Diederich et al. (2008) [ | 1. L venous pontine angioma (symptoms for 7 years) 2. R midbrain hemiatrophy (symptoms for 32 years) | Contralateral VIM | Substantially ameliorated postural > rest > intention component | 7 years and 5 years, respectively |
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| Peker et al. (2008) [ | Left thalamic abscess (symptoms 18 months) | Right VIM | 90% overall improvement | 2.5 years |
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| Plaha et al. (2008) [ | No obvious MRI abnormality (symptoms for 6 years) | Contralateral caudal Zi | 70.2% improvement in total TRS | N/A |
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| Lim et al. (2007) | Midbrain hemorrhage from a cavernous malformation (symptoms for 9 months) | Right VIM + VOA + GPi | 7% improvement with GPi DBS and 0% with VIM or VOA DBS | 8 months |
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| Foote et al. (2006) [ | Posttraumatic tremors: Three patients with symptoms for 16 years, 3 years, and 4 years | Two patients with VIM (border VIM/VOP and one with border VOA/VOP) | Total TRS improvement of 38.46 %, 48.33%, and 66.67 %, respectively | 12 months, 6 months, and 8 months, respectively |
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| Nikkhah et al. (2004) [ | 1.Right infarct midbrain (tremor symptoms 6 months); 2. Left thalamic AVM | Two patients with contralateral VIM | Almost complete tremor resolution (80% improvement). Dystonia and rigidity benefit reported | 7 months and 6 months, respectively |
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| Piette et al. (2004) [ | Pontine tegmental hemorrhage | Right VIM | Major functional improvement | 16 months |
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| Romanelli et al. (2003) [ | Unknown, severe symptoms 6 years | Left VIM and left STN | Tremor component improved 66%. | 2 years |
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| Samadani et al. (2003) [ | Left midbrain cavernous malformation (symptoms for 4 years) | Contralateral VIM | 57% increase in dexterity and four-point decrease in functional disability in TRS. | N/A |
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| Pahwa et al. (2002) [ | Midbrain cavernous hemangioma (symptoms for 3 years) | Right VIM | Significant improvement in postural and resting tremor; kinetic component persisted. | 10 months |
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AVM = arteriovenous malformation, DBS = deep brain stimulation, DRTT = dentatorubrothalamic tract, GPi = globus pallidus, HT = Holmes tremor, NA= not assessed, TRS = Fahn–Tolosa–Marin tremor rating scale, Raprl = prelemniscal radiation, VIM = ventral intermediate nucleus, VOA = ventral oral anterior nucleus, VOP = ventral oral posterior nucleus, Zi = zona incerta.