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Parkinson's Disease: Surgical Options.

Surgical therapy for Parkinson's disease (PD) has been a treatment option
for over 100 years. Advances in the knowledge of basal ganglia physiology
and in techniques of stereotactic neurosurgery and neuroimaging have
allowed more accurate placement of lesions or "brain pacemakers" in the
sensorimotor regions of target nuclei. This, in turn, has led to improved
efficacy with fewer complications than in the past.

Currently, bilateral deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the subthalamic
nucleus (STN) or the internal segment of the globus pallidus (GPi) is the
preferred option (and is approved by the US Food and Drug Administration)
for the surgical treatment of PD. The most important predictors for outcome
for DBS for PD are patient selection and electrode location. Patients
should have a documented preoperative improvement from dopaminergic
medication of at least 30% in the patient's Unified Parkinson's Disease
Rating Scale motor disability scores. A levodopa challenge may be needed to
document the best 'on' state. Dementia or active cognitive decline must be
excluded. Active psychiatric disease should be treated preoperatively.
Patients should be motivated, with good support systems, and committed to
the postoperative management of DBS therapy.

Deep brain stimulation should be considered when the patient begins to
experience dyskinesia and on-off fluctuations despite optimal medical
therapy. Deep brain stimulation is not a good option at the final stages of
the disease because of the increased incidence of dementia and severe
comorbidity. The DBS electrode should be placed in the sensorimotor region
of the GPi or STN. Subthalamic nucleus and GPi DBS can improve all motor
aspects of PD, as well as predictable 'on' time, without dyskinesia or
fluctuations. On average, STN DBS results in a greater reduction of
dopaminergic medication compared with GPi DBS. Because of the smaller size
of the target region, the pulse generator battery life is longer with STN
then with GPi DBS. Deep brain stimulation programming is a skill that is
readily learned and may be required of all neurologists in the future.

Emerging surgical therapies are restorative, and they aim to replace or
regenerate degenerating dopaminergic neurons. These include embryonic
mesencephalic tissue transplantation, human embryonic stem cell
transplantation, and gene-derived methods of intracerebral implantation of
growth factors and dopamine-producing cell lines. It will be important to
determine whether DBS, if performed before the onset of motor response
complications to medical therapy, may prevent this stage of disease
altogether or delay it for a significant period of time. The same question
applies to the future with restorative therapy.

Curr Treat Options Neurol 2003 Mar;5(2):131-147
Bronte-Stewart H.
Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, CA 94305-5235, USA.
PMID: 12628062

janet paterson: an akinetic rigid subtype, albeit primarily perky, parky
pd: 56-41-37 cd: 56-44-43 tel: 613-256-8340 email: [log in to unmask]
my newsletter: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/newvoicenews/
my website: http://www.geocities.com/janet313/

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