Author/Editor     Trošt, Maja; Su, Philip C; Barnes, Anna; Su, Sherwin L; Yen, Ruoh-Fang; Tseng, Ham-Min; Ma, Yilong; Eidelberg, David
Title     Evolving metabolic changes during the first postoperative year after subthalamotomy
Type     članek
Source     J Neurosurg
Vol. and No.     Letnik 99
Publication year     2003
Volume     str. 872-8
Language     eng
Abstract     Object. Short-term benefit from unilateral subthalamotomy for advanced Parkinson disease (PD) is associated with metabolic alterations in key targets of subthalamic nucleus (STN) and globes pallidus (GP) output. In this study positron emission tomography (PET) scanning was used to assess these changes and their relation to long-term benefits of subthalamotomy. Methods. To determine whether the early postoperative changes persisted at longer-term follow up, the authors assessed six patients with advanced PD by using [18F] fluorodcoxyglucose-PET at 3 and 12 months postsurgery. The authors com pared each of the postoperative images with baseline studies, and assessed internal changes between the short- and longtenn follow-up scans. Clinical improvement at 3 and 12 months was associated with sustained metabolic decreases in the midbrain GP internus (GPi), thalamus, and pons of the lesioned side (p < 0.01). The activity of a PD-related multiregional brain network, which correlated with bradykinesia and rigidity, was reduced at both postoperative time points (p < 0.05). Comparisons of 3- and 12-month images revealed a relative metabolic increase in the GP externus (GPe) (p < 0.001), which was associated with worsening gait, postual stability, and tremor at long-term follow up. Conclusions. These findings indicate that subthalamotomy may have differential effects on each of the functional pathways that mediate parkinsonian symptomatology. Sustained relief of akinesia and rigidity is associated with suppression of a pathological network involving the GPi and its output. In contrast, the recurrence of tremor may relate to changes in the function of an STN-GPe oscillatory network.
Descriptors     GLOBUS PALLIDUS
PARKINSON DISEASE
THALAMIC NUCLEI
ADULT
MIDDLE AGE
SEX FACTORS
FOLLOW-UP STUDIES
POSTOPERATIVE PERIOD
TIME FACTORS
TOMOGRAPHY, EMISSION-COMPUTED