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Dysgeusia induced and resolved by focused ultrasound thalamotomy: case report.

Authors: De Vloo P, Boutet A, Elias GJB, Gramer RM, Joel SE, Llinas M, Kucharczyk W, Fasano A, Hamani C, Lozano AM

Dysgeusia, or distorted taste, has recently been acknowledged as a complication of thalamic ablation or thalamic deep brain stimulation as a treatment of tremor. In a unique patient, left-sided MR-guided focused ultrasound thalamotomy improved right-sided essential tremor but also induced severe dysgeusia. Although dysgeusia persisted and caused substantial weight loss, tremor slowly relapsed. Therefore, 19 months after the first procedure, the patient underwent a second focused ultrasound thalamotomy procedure, which again improved tremor but also completely resolved the dysgeusia. On the basis of normative and patient-specific whole-brain tractography, the authors determined the relationship between the thalamotomy lesions and the medial border of the medial lemniscus-a surrogate for the solitariothalamic gustatory fibers-after the first and second focused ultrasound thalamotomy procedures. Both tractography methods suggested partial and complete disruption of the solitariothalamic gustatory fibers after the first and second thalamotomy procedures, respectively. The tractography findings in this unique patient demonstrate that incomplete and complete disruption of a neural pathway can induce and resolve symptoms, respectively, and serve as the rationale for ablative procedures for neurological and psychiatric disorders.

Introduction

Purpose Thermal Ablation
Study Objective To report a case of dysgeusia induced by focused ultrasound thalamotomy and its subsequent resolution.
Disease model Dysgeusia
MRI or image guidance method MRI
Targeted brain region(s) Thalamus
Target coordinates not provided

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes Focused ultrasound thalamotomy induced transient dysgeusia (taste disturbance) in a patient that subsequently resolved; no multiple ultrasound parameters were reported.
Duration of biological effect not specified
Safety-related matter The case report describes dysgeusia (a taste disturbance) induced as an adverse effect of focused ultrasound thalamotomy, which subsequently resolved.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

FUS Intensity 654 W
FUS Pressure Not provided
FUS Mode not specified
Pulse duration not specified
Duration of a single FUS session not specified
Focal Characteristics not specified
Treatment frequency multiple sessions

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