Print

Print


Neurol Res 2000 Apr;22(3):237-46

Future prospects of brain stimulation.

Benabid AL, Koudsie A, Pollak P, Kahane P, Chabardes S, Hirsch E, Marescaux
C, Benazzouz A

Inserm U 318, CHU of Grenoble, France.

Chronic high frequency (130 Hz) stimulation (HFS) of the thalamic target Vim
has replaced thalamotomy as a treatment of tremor of various origins and was
extended to two other targets (Subthalamic nucleus (STN) and the medial
pallidus (GPi)), since 1993 based on recent experimental data in rats and
monkeys. STN appears to be a target of major interest, able to control the
three cardinal symptoms and to allow the decrease or suppression of levodopa
treatment, which then suppresses also levodopa induced dyskinesias. The
mechanisms of action of HFS are not fully understood, but are definitely
related to high frequency and are probably different depending on the
target. Inhibition of cellular activity or of network functions could be
induced, by jamming of a retroactive loop for tremor, or by shutdown of
neurotransmitter release in STN. All cardinal symptoms are alleviated from
tremor to akinesia and rigidity. The effects remain stable over more than
five years chronic HFS of STN, as the method of choice when a surgical
procedure is indicated for the treatment of Parkinson's disease and even
more when a bilateral procedure is necessary. Recent data show that STN
stimulation could be useful in the treatment of dystonia as well as some
forms of epilepsies. It is therefore possible that DAS in STN as well as in
other targets could become a potent therapeutic tool in the future for
neurological disorders. The future of brain stimulation will depend on new
technologies (new circuits, electrodes, web based programmers), waveforms
(alternatives to square waves, random distribution), targets (hypothalamic
nuclei, locus coeruleus) and indications (dystonia, epilepsy, eating
disorders.