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Behavioral complications of early pallidotomy

A review of stereotactic medial pallidotomy of the 1950s in five neurosurgical centers is presented.
The surgical technique varied from one center to the other. The results of surgery, however, seemed
to be quite equal, being positive in 70-90% of the patients. The surgical mortality ranged from 0 to
13%. Behavioral complications were adequately analyzed and reported from one center only and
published by three independent neurologists. The side effects included drowsiness (12%), confusion
(13.6%), mental deterioration (5%), memory deficit (13.6%), and dysphasia (7.5-24%, the rate
depending on the concomitant brain atrophy). Among permanent side effects, 5% of the patients
presented with a mild postoperative mental deterioration, whereas 13.6% had a severe memory deficit.
In the four other centers, the results and side effects were analyzed only by the surgeons and were
more biased. A comparison of the results and complications between Leksell's early medial pallidotomy
of 1951-1957 and recent medial pallidotomies of the 1990s from two centers showed that 40 years
ago Leksell had at least as good results as, and less serious complications than, two representative
neurosurgeons of today. Even when positive clinical results of GPi pallidotomy have recently been
reported from several centers, the patients seem to have improved relatively little, the dyskinesias
excepted, and the rate of side effects has been quite high. The author is afraid that medial pallidotomy
will soon be abandoned as a method of choice in the surgical treatment of Parkinson's disease, as in
fact happened 40 years ago. One should look for better surgical alternatives and targets outside of the
medial pallidum. Copyright 2000 Academic Press.

LV Laitinen
Brain Cogn 2000 Apr;42(3):313-23
Sophiahemmet Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden.
PMID: 10753482, UI: 20218804

janet paterson
53 now / 41 dx / 37 onset
613 256 8340 / PO Box 171 Almonte Ontario K0A 1A0 Canada
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