Thirty-two patients with refractory central and neuropathic pain of peripheral origin were treated by chronic stimulation of the motor cortex between May 1993 and January 1997. The mean follow-up was 27.3 months. The first 24 patients were operated according to the technique described by Tsubokawa. The last 13 cases (eight new patients and five reinterventions) were operated by a technique including localisation by superficial CT reconstruction of the central region and neuronavigator guidance. The position of the central sulcus was confirmed by the use of intraoperative somatosensory evoked potentials. The somatotopic organisation of the motor cortex was established peroperatively by studying the motor responses at stimulation of the motor cortex through the dura. Ten of the 13 patients with central pain (77%) and ten of the 12 patients with neuropathic facial pain had experienced substantial pain relief (75%). One of the three patients with post-paraplegia pain was clearly improved. A satisfactory result was obtained in one patient with pain related to plexus avulsion and in one patient with pain related to intercostal herpes zooster. None of the patients developed epileptic seizures. The position of the stimulating poles effective on pain corresponded to the somatotopic representation of the motor cortex. The neuronavigator localisation and guidance technique proved to be most useful identifying the appropriate portion of the motor gyrus. It also allowed the establishment of reliable correlations between electrophysiological-clinical and anatomical data which may be used to improve the clinical results and possibly to extend the indications of this technique.
Tremor can be particularly disabling in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) and is mildly improved by drug treatment. The efficiency of stereotactic thalamotomy has been reported in a small number of patients but was counterbalanced by severe postoperative complications. Stimulation of the thalamic ventral intermediate nucleus, which is a less aggressive surgical method, is efficient in essential and in parkinsonian tremors. We report here the results of thalamic stimulation in 13 patients with MS with tremor. All patients were subjected to clinical examination, videorecording, and quantification of the functional disability before surgery and 3 months postoperatively. The surgical intervention was well tolerated in all cases. A clear improvement of the tremor was observed in 69.2% of the patients. Functional improvement was more varied and depended on the severity of tremor and coexistence of other neurological symptoms. Of the eight most severely affected patients, seven recovered the possibility to easily catch an object and use it. The results indicate that thalamic stimulation may be useful in the treatment of severe postural cerebellar tremor in MS.
The authors present a patient who had long-term improvement of a severe upper limb action tremor after chronic cortical stimulation. A 40-year-old woman complained of facial pain and tremor of the left arm after removal of an acoustic neurinoma. A motor cortex stimulation was performed to treat the deafferentation facial pain in 1993. Chronic cortical stimulation induced complete relief of both pain and tremor and allowed the patient to recover functional capacity of the limb. These effects persisted throughout a 32-month follow up. Differential effects on pain and tremor were observed when parameters of stimulation were varied, suggesting different mechanisms for the relief of pain and tremor. Attention was focused on control of the tremor. This effect could be the result of the inhibition of subcortical structures which are involved in tremor. Chronic cortical stimulation appears to be an effective treatment for controlling severe action tremors.
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