Selective peripheral denervation: comparison with pallidal stimulation and literature review

  • Maria Fiorella Contarino*
  • , Pepijn Van den Munckhof
  • , Marina A. J. Tijssen
  • , Rob M. A. de Bie
  • , D. Andries Bosch
  • , P. Richard Schuurman
  • , Johannes D. Speelman
  • *Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

    17 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Patients with cervical dystonia who are non-responders to Botulinum toxin qualify for surgery. Selective peripheral denervation (Bertrand's procedure, SPD) and deep brain stimulation of the globus pallidus (GPi-DBS) are available surgical options. Although peripheral denervation has potential advantages over DBS, the latter is nowadays more commonly performed. We describe the long-term outcome of selective peripheral denervation as compared with GPi-DBS, along with the findings of literature review. Twenty patients with selective peripheral denervation and 15 with GPi-DBS were included. Tsui scale, a visual analogue scale, and the global outcome score of the Toronto Western Spasmodic Torticollis Rating Scale were used to define a "combined global surgical outcome". The "combined global surgical outcome" for patients with selective peripheral denervation or pallidal stimulation was respectively "bad" for 65 and 13.3 %, "fair-to-good" for 30 and 26.7 %, and "marked" improvement for 5 and 60 % (p <0.001). Improvement on visual analogue scale (p <0.002), global outcome score (p <0.002), and Tsui score (p <0.000) was larger for the pallidal stimulation group. Seventy-five percent of patients with selective peripheral denervation and 60 % of patients with pallidal stimulation reported side effects. Seven patients with selective peripheral denervation successively underwent GPi-DBS, with a further significant improvement in the Tsui score (-48.6 +/- A 17.4 %). GPi-DBS is to be preferred to selective peripheral denervation for the treatment of cervical dystonia because it produces larger benefit, even if it can have more potentially severe complications. GPi-DBS is also a valid alternative in case of failure of SPD.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)300-308
    Number of pages9
    JournalJournal of Neurology
    Volume261
    Issue number2
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Feb-2014

    Keywords

    • Cervical dystonia
    • Selective peripheral denervation
    • Bertrand's procedure
    • Deep brain stimulation
    • Globus pallidus
    • DEEP BRAIN-STIMULATION
    • IDIOPATHIC CERVICAL DYSTONIA
    • SPASMODIC TORTICOLLIS
    • BOTULINUM-TOXIN
    • SUBTHALAMIC NUCLEUS
    • CONTROLLED-TRIAL
    • EXPERIENCE
    • DIAGNOSIS
    • OUTCOMES

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