Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6208042 Gait & Posture 2012 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Following the hypothesis that thalamic deep brain stimulation improves ataxia in patients with essential tremor by modulating the cerebello-thalamo-cortical pathway, we examined the joint kinematics of lower limbs during uninterrupted gait in eleven patients who have been treated with bilateral thalamic stimulation for 24.7 ± 20.3 months. Patients were assessed under routine chronic stimulation, supra-therapeutic amplitude, and off stimulation by means of an infrared movement analysis system while walking on a treadmill. Chronic thalamic DBS normalized the highly variable excursion throughout the gait cycle that characterized the subgroup of patients with longest disease duration. Supratherapeutic thalamic DBS amplitude did not reproduce such improvements while, more importantly, it induced ataxic changes of joint excursion. The normalization of kinematic abnormalities argues against the hypothesis of a cerebellar neurodegeneration in ET. Moreover, these results suggest that the beneficial effect of thalamic DBS on ataxic symptoms is limited to a narrow therapeutic window.

► Thalamic deep brain stimulation modulates the cerebello-thalamo-cortical pathway. ► Joint kinematics of lower limbs are impaired in advanced cases of Essential Tremor. ► Chronic thalamic stimulation normalized this highly variable joints excursion. ► Supratherapeutic thalamic stimulation induces ataxic changes of joint excursion. ► The beneficial effect on ataxic symptoms is limited to a narrow therapeutic window.

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