J Korean Neurosurg Soc.  1996 Feb;25(2):352-359.

MRI-guided Stereotactic Thalamotomy for Cerebral Palsy Patients of Mixed Dyskinesia

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Neurosugery, Capital Armed Forces General Hospital, Seoul, Korea.
  • 2Department of Neurosugery, College of Medicine, Hallym University Kangdong Sacred Heart Hospital, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract

A few neurosurgical alleviate to alleviate some dyskinesias of cerebral palsy(CP) have been tried. For the spastic and tremor type, the selective posterior rhizotomy and thalamotomy are regarded as treatments of choice but other dyskinesias remains a tough challenge. The authors have performed 48 cases of MRI-guided stereotactic thalamotomy(MGST) in 37 CP patients with mixed dyskinesias from Jun. '92 to Jan. '95 using CRW stereotactic frame and MRI, without any ventriculogram. Depending upon the types of main dyskinesias, the target including ventrolateral nucleus of thalamus or medial nucleus of globus pallidus was(were) selected. Clinical results were verified in terms of preoperative symptoms improvement and patient's satisfaction. In athetoid(42 MGSTs in 32CPs) : excellent 6, good 26, fair 10, and in dystonia(30 MGSTs in 23 CPs): excellent 2, good 18, fair 10, and in spasticity(20 in 17 CPs): excellent 3, good 12, fair 5, and in choreoor choreoathetoid(7 in 6 CPs) : good 5, fair 2. Recurrence of symptoms after operation was noted in 6 cases(12.5%). Postoperative morbidity including motor weakness, speech disturbance, swallowing difficulty, and sensory abnormality were transiently noted in 9 cases(18.8%). It is the authors observation that MGST seems to be one of the beneficial procedures for relieving symptoms of CP with mixed dyskinesias.

Keyword

Cerebral palsy; Dyskinesia; Stereotactic thalamotomy MRI

MeSH Terms

Cerebral Palsy*
Deglutition
Dyskinesias*
Globus Pallidus
Humans
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Muscle Spasticity
Recurrence
Rhizotomy
Thalamus
Tremor
Full Text Links
  • JKNS
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr