Bilateral MRgFUS thalamotomy for tremor: A safe solution? Case report and review of current insights (original) (raw)
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The differential diagnosis and treatment of tremor
Deutsches Ă„rzteblatt international, 2014
Essential tremor is the most common type of tremor, with a prevalence of 0.4% in the overall population and 4-7% in persons over age 65. In general, tremor is so common that patients with tremor are frequently treated not only by neurologists, but also by physicians from other specialties. This review is based on publications retrieved by a selective PubMed search and on guidelines from Germany and abroad. Particular tremor syndromes are usually diagnosed on the basis of their typical clinical presentation and whatever accompanying manifestations may be present. Ancillary tests are usually unnecessary. Unilateral rest tremor accompanied by rigidity and bradykinesia is typical of Parkinson's disease. Essential tremor is a bilateral postural tremor. The most common cause of intention tremor is multiple sclerosis. Mild tremor syndromes can often be treated satisfactorily with drugs. In case of severe tremor, which is rarer, a stereotactic operation can be considered. The usual outc...
Neurology, 2005
Background: Essential tremor (ET) is one of the most common tremor disorders in adults and is characterized by kinetic and postural tremor. To develop this practice parameter, the authors reviewed available evidence regarding initiation of pharmacologic and surgical therapies, duration of their effect, their relative benefits and risks, and the strength of evidence supporting their use. Methods: A literature review using MEDLINE, EMBASE, Science Citation Index, and CINAHL was performed to identify clinical trials in patients with ET published between 1966 and August 2004. Articles were classified according to a four-tiered level of evidence scheme and recommendations were based on the level of evidence. Results and Conclusions: Propranolol and primidone reduce limb tremor (Level A). Alprazolam, atenolol, gabapentin (monotherapy), sotalol, and topiramate are probably effective in reducing limb tremor (Level B). Limited studies suggest that propranolol reduces head tremor (Level B). Clonazepam, clozapine, nadolol, and nimodipine possibly reduce limb tremor (Level C). Botulinum toxin A may reduce hand tremor but is associated with dose-dependent hand weakness (Level C). Botulinum toxin A may reduce head tremor (Level C) and voice tremor (Level C), but breathiness, hoarseness, and swallowing difficulties may occur in the treatment of voice tremor. Chronic deep brain stimulation (DBS) (Level C) and thalamotomy (Level C) are highly efficacious in reducing tremor. Each procedure carries a small risk of major complications. Some adverse events from DBS may resolve with time or with adjustment of stimulator settings. There is insufficient evidence regarding the surgical treatment of head and voice tremor and the use of gamma knife thalamotomy (Level U). Additional prospective, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials are needed to better determine the efficacy and side effects of pharmacologic and surgical treatments of ET. netic tremor of the hands in the absence of other neurologic signs. Many clinicians accept isolated tremor of the head if there is no evidence of dystonia. Propranolol and primidone are commonly used to treat ET, although propranolol is the only medication that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for this purpose. It is estimated that at least 30% of patients with ET will not respond to propranolol or primidone. 7 Alcohol reduces tremor amplitude in 50 to 90% of cases, 8-10 but tremor may temporarily worsen after the effect of alcohol has worn off. 11 Invasive therapies including surgical procedures may provide clinical benefit in cases of refractory tremor.
Diagnosis and Treatment of Common Forms of Tremor
Seminars in Neurology, 2011
Tremor is the most common movement disorder presenting to an outpatient neurology practice and is defined as a rhythmical, involuntary oscillatory movement of a body part. The authors review the clinical examination, classification, and diagnosis of tremor. The pathophysiology of the more common forms of tremor is outlined, and treatment options are discussed. Essential tremor is characterized primarily by postural and action tremors, may be a neurodegenerative disorder with pathologic changes in the cerebellum, and can be treated with a wide range of pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic methods. Tremor at rest is typical for Parkinson's disease, but may arise independently of a dopaminergic deficit. Enhanced physiologic tremor, intention tremor, and dystonic tremor are discussed. Further differential diagnoses described in this review include drug-or toxin-induced tremor, neuropathic tremor, psychogenic tremor, orthostatic tremor, palatal tremor, tremor in Wilson's disease, and tremor secondary to cerebral lesions, such as Holmes' tremor (midbrain tremor). An individualized approach to treatment of tremor patients is important, taking into account the degree of disability, including social embarrassment, which the tremor causes in the patient's life.
Diagnosis and management of essential tremor and dystonic tremor
Therapeutic advances in neurological disorders, 2009
Essential tremor (ET) is the most common adult movement disorder. Traditionally considered as a benign disease, it can cause an important physical and psychosocial disability. Drug treatment for ET remains poor and often unsatisfactory. Current therapeutic strategies for ET are reviewed according to the level of discomfort caused by tremor. For mild tremor, nonpharmacological strategies consist of alcohol and acute pharmacological therapy; for moderate tremor, pharmacological therapies (propranolol, gabapentin, primidone, topiramate, alprazolam and other drugs); and for severe tremor, the role of functional surgery is emphasised (thalamic deep brain stimulation, thalamotomy). The more specific treatment of head tremor with the use of botulinum toxin is also discussed. Several points are discussed to guide the immediate research into this disease in the near future. Dystonic tremor is a common symptom in dystonia. Diagnostic criteria for dystonic tremor and differential diagnosis wit...
Movement Disorders Clinical Practice
Background: The Fahn-Tolosa-Marin Clinical Rating Scale for Tremor (FTM) has been used in large trials for essential tremor (ET), but its anchors for ratings from 0 to 4 of upper limb tremor are probably too low for patients with severe tremor (tremor amplitude >4 cm; grade 4). The Essential Tremor Rating Assessment Scale (TETRAS) is a validated clinical scale designed specifically for the assessment of ET severity. TETRAS has anchors that span a larger range of tremor amplitudes (>20 cm = grade 4), making it more suitable for assessing patients with severe ET. However, there is no direct comparison of these scales in any clinical trial. Methods: Upper limb postural and kinetic tremor items from both scales were compared using blinded, video-recorded examinations of patients with moderate-to-severe ET who participated in a trial of focused ultrasound thalamotomy. Results: FTM ratings of postural and kinetic tremor correlated strongly with those of TETRAS. However, FTM exhibited a ceiling effect for severe tremor. Rest tremor, exclusive to FTM, correlated poorly with postural and kinetic tremor and had very poor test-retest reliability. In contrast, wing-beating postural tremor, exclusive to TETRAS, exhibited excellent test-retest reliability and a strong correlation with kinetic and limbs-extendedforward postural tremor. Test-retest reliabilities of the other TETRAS and FTM ratings were excellent, and both scales had good sensitivity to treatment effect. Conclusions: TETRAS has 2 main advantages over FTM in the assessment of tremor severity: (1) the absence of a ceiling effect in patients with severe ET, and (2) the inclusion of wing-beating tremor. Clinical trials for essential tremor (ET) have employed dozens of different scales and assessments as measures of primary efficacy. The most commonly used scale in large trials has been the Fahn-Tolosa-Marin Clinical Rating Scale for Tremor (FTM). 1 The Essential Tremor Rating Assessment Scale (TETRAS) is a more recently validated scale that was designed specifically for the assessment of tremor severity in patients with ET. 2 Both expert and novice raters perform TETRAS with excellent inter-rater and intra-rater reliability. 3 The reliability of FTM is less established. Large numbers of raters, rating a small sample of patients, found good intra-rater reliability and fair inter-rater reliability for the tremor location/severity items but only fair intra-rater reliability and poor inter-rater reliability for spiral drawing and handwriting ratings. 4 The reliability of the water-pouring task was not assessed. There are 2 main differences in how upper limb tremor is assessed using these scales. First, the FTM assesses postural tremor in the limbs-extended-forward posture, kinetic tremor in
2021
Abstract: Background: MR-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) is an effective treatment for essential tremor (ET). However, the optimal intracranial target sites remain to be determined. Objective: To assess MRgFUS induced sequential lesions in (anterior-VIM/VOP nuclei) the thalamus and then posterior subthalamic area (PSA) performed during the same procedure for alleviating ET. Methods: 14 patients had unilateral MRgFUS lesions placed in anterior-VIM/VOP then PSA. Bain-Findley Spirals were collected during MRgFUS from the treated arm (BFS-TA) and throughout the study from the treated (BFS-TA) and non-treated (BFS-NTA) arms and scored by blinded assessors. Although, the primary outcome was change in the BFS-TA from baseline to 12 months we have highlighted the 24 month data. Secondary outcomes included the Clinical Rating Scale for Tremor (CRST), Quality of Life for ET (QUEST) and PHQ-9 depression scores. Results: The mean improvement in the BFS-TA from baseline to 24 months was 41.1%...
Long-Term Patient-Reported Outcome of Radiofrequency Thalamotomy for Tremor
Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery
Background: Thalamotomy is an endorsed treatment for medication-refractory tremor. It used to be the standard, but nowadays deep brain stimulation (DBS) has become the treatment option of choice. Nevertheless, DBS has the disadvantage of hardware failure, battery replacement, and frequent setting adjustment. Radiofrequency (RF) thalamotomy lacks these issues, is relatively inexpensive, and has a broad applicability in patients with significant comorbidity. Therefore, we analyzed the long-term patient-reported outcome of RF thalamotomy in a cohort of patients with an otherwise intractable tremor. Methods: A single-center cohort of 27 consecutive patients with intractable tremor was assessed after unilateral RF thalamotomy. Over time, 4 patients had died because of non-related causes. In total, 21 patients responded to a telephone survey to assess their personal judgment on postoperative tremor severity, using a validated tremor scale, adverse events, recurrence, and patient satisfaction. The median time between surgery and telephone survey was 39 months (range 12-126). Seven patients had an additional analysis with postoperative imaging, video-assisted electromyography tremor registration, and a self-reported treatment effect (SRTE) assessment. Results: Nineteen out of 21 patients (90.5%) reported absence or significant improvement of their tremor. The rating score (WHIGET/ UPDRS-III) dropped significantly from a mean of 3.57 preoperatively to 1.05 postoperatively (p < 0.001). Eleven patients (52.4%) reported adverse events, but the majority (76.2%) did not consider the adverse events to be severe. SRTE assessment showed a direct postoperative effect of 89.6 of 100 points (SD 10.8), with a gradual decrease to 75.3 (SD 23.5) during follow-up. Conclusions: RF thalamotomy is a very effective long-term treatment for medication-refractory tremor and should therefore be considered in patients with a refractory unilateral tremor.
Essential Tremor: Diagnosis and Treatment
Pharmacotherapy, 2003
Essential tremor is a common movement disorder in adults that interferes with the performance of functional and social activities. Differentiation of essential tremor from other tremor syndromes is important in order to provide appropriate patient education and therapy. The mainstays of pharmacotherapy are propranolol and primidone; however, in selected patients, agents such as alcohol, benzodiazepines, botulinum toxin, and gabapentin may provide symptomatic benefits. Advances in surgical interventions, such as stereotactic thalamotomy and thalamic deep brain stimulation, offer patients an alternative treatment modality when pharmacotherapy is inadequate. A treatment algorithm is provided to guide clinicians in the management of patients with essential tremor.