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- Title
Electromyography during Stereotactic Pallidotomy for Parkinson's Disease.
- Authors
Landy, Howard J.; Weiner, William J.; Calancie, Blair; Harris, William; Shulman, Lisa M.; Singer, Carlos; Abrams, Lisa; Bowen, Brian
- Abstract
In stereotactic pallidotomy for Parkinson's disease, care must be taken to avoid internal capsule injury while maximizing improvement of rigidity and tremor. In 21 patients, intraoperative electromyography (EMG) was used to assess stimulation thresholds required for capsular responses and to monitor muscle tone and tremor. Surface EMG electrodes were placed on the face and multiple muscle groups of the extremities. The stimulation and lesion electrode was introduced via MRI-guided stereotaxis toward a point 2-3 mm anterior to the midcommissural point, 5-6 mm inferior to the AC-PC plane, and 21-22 mm lateral to the midline. Exact targets were modified according to MRI-visualized anatomy. With stimulation at 5 and 50 Hz, thresholds for detection of EMG responses were usually seen at 4-5 mA. EMG responses were consistently seen prior to visual observation of muscle activity. Timing of EMG response relative to stimulus aided in differentiating stimulus-related movement from spontaneous tremor. Resting spontaneous EMG activity was seen to decrease as rigidity was improved by incremental lesion production. EMG activity related to tremor was recorded; tremor decrease by lesion production was documented by EMG recording. Patient cooperation with physiologic testing during stimulation and lesion production may become limited. Intraoperative EMG monitoring provides an adjunct to improve reliability of assessment of capsular stimulation and rigidity while providing documentation of lesion impact on rigidity and tremor. Copyright © 2000 S. Karger AG, Basel
- Publication
Stereotactic & Functional Neurosurgery, 2000, Vol 74, Issue 1, p21
- ISSN
1011-6125
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1159/000056459