1949
DOI: 10.1001/archneurpsyc.1949.02310100077006
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Interruption of the Sympathetic Nerve Supply to the Brain—effect on Parkinson's Syndrome

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Cited by 13 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Leriche performed the earliest known PD surgery in 1912-a bilateral posterior cervical rhizotomy for rigidity [2]. For the next several decades, surgeons began experimenting with lesioning the pyramidal tracts: motor cortectomy [3], midbrain pedunculotomy [4], cerebellar dentatectomy [5], anterolateral cordotomy [6], lateral pyramidal tractotomy [7], posterolateral chordotomy [8], sympathetic ramicotomy, and ganglionectomy [9]. After an inadvertent anterior choroidal artery occlusion during a midbrain pedunculotomy arrested a patient's tremor without hemiplegia, Cooper went on to perform planned surgical ligations of the anterior choroidal artery to alleviate tremor and rigidity.…”
Section: Historical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Leriche performed the earliest known PD surgery in 1912-a bilateral posterior cervical rhizotomy for rigidity [2]. For the next several decades, surgeons began experimenting with lesioning the pyramidal tracts: motor cortectomy [3], midbrain pedunculotomy [4], cerebellar dentatectomy [5], anterolateral cordotomy [6], lateral pyramidal tractotomy [7], posterolateral chordotomy [8], sympathetic ramicotomy, and ganglionectomy [9]. After an inadvertent anterior choroidal artery occlusion during a midbrain pedunculotomy arrested a patient's tremor without hemiplegia, Cooper went on to perform planned surgical ligations of the anterior choroidal artery to alleviate tremor and rigidity.…”
Section: Historical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%