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Case Report on Deep Brain Stimulation Rescue After Suboptimal MR-Guided Focused Ultrasound Thalamotomy for Essential Tremor: A Tractography-Based Investigation.

Authors: Saluja S, Barbosa DAN, Parker JJ, Huang Y, Jensen MR, Ngo V, Santini VE, Pauly KB, Ghanouni P, McNab JA, Halpern CH

Essential tremor (ET) is the most prevalent movement disorder in adults, and can often be medically refractory, requiring surgical intervention. MRI-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) is a less invasive procedure that uses ultrasonic waves to induce lesions in the ventralis intermedius nucleus (VIM) to treat refractory ET. As with all procedures for treating ET, optimal targeting during MRgFUS is essential for efficacy and durability. Various studies have reported cases of tremor recurrence following MRgFUS and long-term outcome data is limited to 3-4 years. We present a tractography-based investigation on a case of DBS rescue for medically refractory ET that was treated with MRgFUS that was interrupted due to the development of dysarthria during the procedure. After initial improvement, her hand tremor started to recur within 6 months after treatment, and bilateral DBS was performed targeting the VIM 24 months after MRgFUS. DBS induced long-term tremor control with monopolar stimulation. Diffusion MRI tractography was used to reconstruct the dentatorubrothalamic (DRTT) and corticothalmic (CTT) tracts being modulated by the procedures to understand the variability in efficacy between MRgFUS and DBS in treating ET in our patient. By comparing the MRgFUS lesion and DBS volume of activated tissue (VAT), we found that the MRgFUS lesion was located ventromedially to the VAT, and was less than 10% of the size of the VAT. While the lesion encompassed the same proportion of DRTT streamlines, it encompassed fewer CTT streamlines than the VAT. Our findings indicate the need for further investigation of targeting the CTT when using neuromodulatory procedures to treat refractory ET for more permanent tremor relief.

Introduction

Purpose Thermal ablation
Study Objective To use diffusion MRI tractography to compare the white-matter tracts modulated by an interrupted MRgFUS thalamotomy versus subsequent DBS in a patient with essential tremor to understand why DBS produced better long-term tremor control.
Disease model essential tremor
MRI or image guidance method MRI-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) targeting the ventralis intermedius nucleus (VIM) using pre- and post-procedure T1/T2 MRI (lesion delineation on same-day T2); localization referenced to VIM via registration to MNI template and the DISTAL atlas
Targeted brain region(s) Vim

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes dMRI tractography revealed that an aborted MRgFUS VIM lesion was too small (<10% of DBS VAT) and medially displaced, failing to modulate sufficient CTT fibers for durable tremor control.
Duration of biological effect 6 months
Safety-related matter The FUS procedure was interrupted due to acute dysarthria, likely caused by the medial placement of sonications affecting speech-related neural pathways.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

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

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