Pretherapeutic functional neuroimaging predicts tremor arrest after thalamotomy.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_BF5630BAF47C
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Pretherapeutic functional neuroimaging predicts tremor arrest after thalamotomy.
Journal
Acta neurologica Scandinavica
Author(s)
Tuleasca C., Najdenovska E., Régis J., Witjas T., Girard N., Champoudry J., Faouzi M., Thiran J.P., Bach Cuadra M., Levivier M., Van De Ville D.
ISSN
1600-0404 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0001-6314
Publication state
Published
Issued date
05/2018
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
137
Number
5
Pages
500-508
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Essential tremor (ET) represents the most common movement disorder. Drug-resistant ET can benefit from standard stereotactic procedures (deep brain stimulation or radiofrequency thalamotomy) or alternatively minimally invasive high-focused ultrasound or radiosurgery. All aim at same target, thalamic ventro-intermediate nucleus (Vim).
The study included a cohort of 17 consecutive patients, with ET, treated only with left unilateral stereotactic radiosurgical thalamotomy (SRS-T) between September 2014 and August 2015. The mean time to tremor improvement was 3.32 months (SD 2.7, 0.5-10). Neuroimaging data were collected at baseline (n = 17). Standard tremor scores, including activities of daily living (ADL) and tremor score on treated hand (TSTH), were completed pretherapeutically and 1 year later. We further correlate these scores with baseline inter-connectivity in twenty major large-scale brain networks.
We report as predictive three networks, with the interconnected statistically significant clusters: primary motor cortex interconnected with inferior olivary nucleus, bilateral thalamus interconnected with motor cerebellum lobule V <sup>2</sup> (ADL), and anterior default-mode network interconnected with Brodmann area 10 <sup>3</sup> (TSTH). For all, more positive pretherapeutic interconnectivity correlated with higher drop in points on the respective scores. Age, disease duration, or time-to-response after SRS-T were not statistically correlated with pretherapeutic brain connectivity measures (P > .05). The same applied to pretherapeutic tremor scores, after using the same methodology described above.
Our findings have clinical implications for predicting clinical response after SRS-T. Here, using pretherapeutic magnetic resonance imaging and data processing without prior hypothesis, we show that pretherapeutic network(s) interconnectivity strength predicts tremor arrest in drug-naïve ET, following stereotactic radiosurgical thalamotomy.

Keywords
essential tremor, fMRI, resting state, stereotactic radiosurgery, thalamotomy
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
22/01/2018 11:12
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:33
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