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Electrode Placement Key to Brain Stimulation for Parkinson's Patients

   
A few millimeters can make a huge difference for Parkinson's patients treated 
with electrodes surgically implanted in the brain, a new study finds. 
 Implanting electrodes to stimulate the subthalamic nucleus, a part of the 
brain potentially related to impulsivity, has helped people with Parkinson's 
disease reduce their medication intake by up to 65 percent and lessen 
characteristic motor impairment by as much as 70 percent, according to 
background information for the study published in the May issue ofArchives of 
Neurology. 
 But a study of seven Parkinson's patients who did not respond well to the 
procedure shows that additional surgery to correct the electrode placement 
greatly improved the patients' condition and dependence on medication. 
 "The principal cause of these poor results arises from imprecision of 
electrode placement, leading to non-stimulation of the target as required," 
the authors wrote. "Misplacement of the electrode by only a few millimeters 
may have occurred." 
 All but one of the patients who received the second surgery showed 
improvement afterward. When not on medication, their motor scores increased 
by 26.7 percent following the first surgery and 59.4 percent after the 
second. Their dose of levodopa, a Parkinson's medication, dropped by more 
than half from 1,202 milligrams to 534 milligrams. 
 The average distance between the electrodes and the target point of 
stimulation -- which was determined by evaluating electrode placement in 
patients whose surgery was successful the first time -- decreased from 5.4 to 
2 millimeters. The shorter the distance, the greater the patients' 
improvement in motor scores. 
 The patients had the re-implantation surgery 12 to 23 months after the 
original procedure. Motor scores and medication doses were assessed a year 
after the second procedure. 
 "Although appropriate patient selection is important for the desired surgical 
outcome, the key to marked improvement following subthalamic nucleus 
stimulation is optimal surgical technique for precise implantation of 
stimulation electrodes in the target," the authors wrote.

SOURCE:Journal of the American Medical Association, news release, May 12, 2008

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