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Magnetic Resonance-Guided Focused Ultrasound Thalamotomy Rebalances Atypical Functional Hierarchy in Patients with Essential Tremor.

Authors: Lin J, Kang X, Lu H, Zhang D, Bian X, Zhou J, Hu J, Zhang D, Sepulcre J, Pan L, Lou X

Magnetic resonance-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) has brought thalamotomy back to the frontline for essential tremor (ET). As functional organization of human brain strictly follows hierarchical principles which are frequently deficient in neurological diseases, whether additional damage from MRgFUS thalamotomy induces further disruptions of ET functional scaffolds are still controversial. This study was to examine the alteration features of brain functional frameworks following MRgFUS thalamotomy in patients with ET. We retrospectively obtained preoperative (ET<sub>pre</sub>) and postoperative 6-month (ET<sub>6m</sub>) data of 30 ET patients underwent MRgFUS thalamotomy from 2018 to 2020. Their archived functional MR images were used to functional gradient comparison. Both supervised pattern learning and stepwise linear regression were conducted to associate gradient features to tremor symptoms with additional neuropathophysiological analysis. MRgFUS thalamotomy relieved 78.19% of hand tremor symptoms and induced vast global framework alteration (ET<sub>6m</sub> vs. ET<sub>pre</sub>: Cohen d = - 0.80, P < 0.001). Multiple robust alterations were identified especially in posterior cingulate cortex ([Formula: see text] ET<sub>6m</sub> vs. [Formula: see text] ET<sub>pre</sub>: Cohen d = 0.87, P = 0.048). Compared with matched health controls (HCs), its gradient distances to primary communities were significantly increased in [Formula: see text] ET<sub>pre</sub> patients with anomalous stepwise connectivity (P < 0.05 in ET<sub>pre</sub> vs. HCs), which were restored after MRgFUS thalamotomy. Both global and regional gradient features could be used for tremor symptom prediction and were linked to neuropathophysiological features of Parkinson disease and oxidative phosphorylation. MRgFUS thalamotomy not only suppress tremor symptoms but also rebalances atypical functional hierarchical architecture of ET patients.

Introduction

Purpose Other
Study Objective To examine alterations in brain functional hierarchical organization following MRgFUS thalamotomy in patients with essential tremor.
Animal model / Human subject Homo sapiens (human patients; essential tremor), strain: N/A, age: not specified, sex: not specified (30 ET patients; matched healthy controls included)
Disease model Essential tremor (ET)
MRI or image guidance method Magnetic resonance-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS)
Targeted brain region(s) Thalamus
Target coordinates ot reported
Cargo name and characteristics MR-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) thalamotomy — a noninvasive device-based therapeutic modality that uses focused acoustic energy under MRI guidance to produce a focal, thermal/coagulative lesion in the ventral intermediate nucleus of the thalamus (typically unilateral, single-session) to reduce essential tremor; nonpharmacologic, nonviral, and does not involve microbubbles.
Route of administration Not applicable (no drug/cargo delivered; treatment was MR-guided focused ultrasound thalamotomy)

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes MRgFUS thalamotomy markedly reduced hand tremor (~78% improvement) and rebalanced atypical hierarchical functional brain organization in essential tremor patients, notably normalizing posterior cingulate connectivity.
Duration of biological effect 6 months
Safety-related matter The paper notes that whether MRgFUS thalamotomy induces additional damage is controversial but reports no specific adverse events, instead describing symptom relief (78.19% improvement) and widespread functional brain alterations.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument ExAblate Neuro focused ultrasound system (InSightec, Israel)
FUS Frequency Not specified in provided text
FUS Intensity Not reported in the provided text
FUS Pressure Not reported
FUS Mode continuous
Pulse duration Not reported
Duration of a single FUS session Not specified in the provided text
Focal Characteristics Not reported
Treatment frequency single session

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