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Differences in intrinsic functional networks in patients with essential tremor who had good and poor long-term responses after thalamotomy performed using MR-guided ultrasound.

Authors: Pae C, Kim MJ, Chang WS, Jung HH, Chang KW, Eo J, Park HJ, Chang JW

Thalamotomy at the nucleus ventralis intermedius using MR-guided focused ultrasound has been an effective treatment method for essential tremor (ET). However, this is not true for all cases, even for successful ablation. How the brain differs in patients with ET between those with long-term good and poor outcomes is not clear. To analyze the functional connectivity difference between patients in whom thalamotomy was effective and those in whom thalamotomy was ineffective and its prognostic role in ET treatment, the authors evaluated preoperative resting-state functional MRI in thalamotomy-treated patients. Preoperative resting-state functional MRI data in 85 patients with ET, who were experiencing tremor relief at the time of treatment and were followed up for a minimum of 6 months after the procedure, were collected for the study. The authors conducted a graph independent component analysis of the functional connectivity matrices of tremor-related networks. The patients were divided into thalamotomy-effective and thalamotomy-ineffective groups (thalamotomy-effective group, ≥ 50% motor symptom reduction; thalamotomy-ineffective group, < 50% motor symptom reduction at 6 months after treatment) and the authors compared network components between groups. Seventy-two (84.7%) of the 85 patients showed ≥ 50% tremor reduction from baseline at 6 months after thalamotomy. The network analysis shows significant suppression of functional network components with connections between the areas of the cerebellum and the basal ganglia and thalamus, but enhancement of those between the premotor cortex and supplementary motor area in the noneffective group compared to the effective group. The present study demonstrates that patients in the noneffective group have suppressed functional subnetworks in the cerebellum and subcortex regions and have enhanced functional subnetworks among motor-sensory cortical networks compared to the thalamotomy-effective group. Therefore, the authors suggest that the functional connectivity pattern might be a possible predictive factor for outcomes of MR-guided focused ultrasound thalamotomy.

Introduction

Purpose Other
Study Objective To investigate differences in intrinsic functional brain networks between essential tremor patients who had good versus poor long-term responses after thalamotomy performed using MR-guided ultrasound.
Disease model Essential tremor
MRI or image guidance method MR-guided ultrasound
Targeted brain region(s) Ventral Intermediate Nucleus

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes Intrinsic functional connectivity patterns in the cerebellum and motor cortex correlated with long-term tremor outcomes after MRgFUS thalamotomy.
Duration of biological effect not reported
Safety-related matter No adverse effects specifically related to the imaging or connectivity analysis reported.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument Exablate Neuro 4000
FUS Frequency 650 kHz
FUS Intensity not reported
FUS Pressure not reported
FUS Mode continuous
Pulse duration not reported
Duration of a single FUS session 10–20 s
Treatment frequency single session

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