X-Linked dystonia parkinsonism (XDP) is a rapidly progressive and disabling neurodegenerative disease affecting mainly male Filipinos with origins from Panay Island. We reviewed all the past neurosurgical ablative procedures done for XDP patients listed in the Philippine XDP registry. From 1960 to 1982, six patients had undergone bilateral chemopallidotomies or bilateral thalomotomies staged over time. Half of these patients had significant improvement in their symptoms but five of the six patients (83%) developed postoperative morbidities, mainly speech impairment or hemiparesis. All the five reported GPi deep brain stimulation (DBS) cases for XDP were also reviewed, showing consistently immediate improvement of symptoms (61.5%-88.3% decrease in the Burke-Marsden-Fahn Dystonia Rating Scale) lasting up to a year with no adverse effects noted. We also present the first Philippine case of GPi DBS done in the youngest XDP patient to date. This present case showed dramatic improvement (88.3% decrease of the Burke-Marsden-Fahn Dystonia Rating Scale) of his dystonic symptoms, without incurring any persistent adverse effects. The results of these early cases of pallidal DBS for XDP show that DBS is generally a safe and effective procedure for alleviating the disabling symptoms of XDP in contrast to previous ablative surgeries performed on these patients.
Object. The purpose of this paper was to describe the clinical outcome in patients with brain metastases who underwent gamma knife radiosurgery (GKS).
Methods. The authors retrospectively reviewed the clinical courses of 54 patients with brain metastases who underwent 62 GKS procedures. This series covered a 43-month period. A total of 174 lesions were treated: 38 patients harbored solitary whereas 24 patients harbored multiple metastases. The authors assessed outcome by examining local disease control, survival, and quality of life.
The overall local control rate was 85%; the mean time to failure of local control was 10.5 months; and median survival was 8.4 months. Median survival, evaluated by the log-rank test, was greater among patients with a single metastasis (p = 0.043), breast cancer (p = 0.021), and those who had undergone multiple GKS procedures for local failure (p = 0.009). The initial Karnofsky Performance Scale (KPS) score and whole-brain radiotherapy were not significantly related to median survival. The KPS scores tended to remain stable through the follow-up period. There were no morbidities or deaths attributable to the procedure.
Conclusions. Results in this series suggest that GKS can be an effective tool for the control of brain metastases. A prospective investigation should be performed to validate trends seen in this retrospective study.
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