Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Beyond improving Parkinson’s Symptoms, does
Deep Brain Stimulation stall their
progression?
Newswise, January 18, 2011 — Parkinson’s
disease symptoms begin subtly and worsen as
damage to certain brain cells continues. But
an electrical stimulation device implanted
deep in the brain and programmed remotely,
along with medications, may provide some
control of “motor symptoms” common to the
disease, such as shaking, stiffness, and
loss of muscle control.
What happens, however, if the drugs are
stopped and the device is switched off after
five years? Are the symptoms far worse than
they were to start, as might be expected
with a “progressive” degenerative disorder?
Surprisingly, no, says neurologist Michele
Tagliati, M.D., director of the Movement
Disorders Program at Cedars-Sinai Medical
Center and one of the nation’s leading
experts in deep brain stimulation therapy.
He and colleagues at Mount Sinai School of
Medicine, where he served before joining
Cedars-Sinai in September, evaluated several
of their deep brain stimulation patients at
one-year intervals: 21 patients at year one;
17 at year two; 14 at year three; 16 at year
four; and nine at year five.
Part of their analysis – evaluating patients
while their drugs temporarily were
discontinued but brain stimulation continued
– confirmed previous studies: Deep brain
stimulation is an effective therapy for
advanced Parkinson’s disease up to five
years from implantation, although there is a
gradual reduction in benefit over time.
This
effectiveness decline usually is attributed
to the disease’s unrelenting progression.
But the researchers also explored
Parkinson’s natural progression in these
patients by temporarily discontinuing both
their drugs and brain stimulation, then
comparing motor function at these yearly
intervals with pre-treatment scores.
“In these patients who were effectively
treated with DBS stimulation, we found that
motor symptoms remained remarkably stable
over time. There was no significant
progression.
"Now we need to do larger
studies to find out why. It may be, as some
have suggested, that deep brain stimulation
stabilizes the motor progression of the
disease, although other studies indicate
that Parkinson’s disease may just naturally
stabilize after several years of
progression,” said Tagliati, pointing out
that “non-motor” symptoms, including
depression, dementia and others, currently
do not respond to deep brain stimulation and
appear to continue to progress.
Tagliati, who leads an educational course on
deep brain stimulator programming every year
at the American Academy of Neurology
meetings, has been studying the procedure
for more than a decade, beginning several
years before the device was approved as a
therapy by the Food and Drug Administration.
He and his counterpart at the University of
California, Los Angeles, Jeff M. Bronstein,
M.D., Ph.D., recently led a panel of
international experts in developing a
consensus on key issues related to the
procedure for Parkinson’s disease. Their
document, with insight and guidance, was
published in Archives
of Neurology in
October.
“Providing the most effective therapy
requires teamwork and the experience and
expertise that come from working in a
specialized center. It involves placing the
device in precisely the right location,
programming and fine-tuning the device,
properly adjusting medications, studying
many patients and outcomes, learning and
teaching – all the activities found in an
academic center,” Tagliati says.
“We’re
looking forward to pursuing innovative
research strategies in the near future.
Although we know DBS can help many patients
with Parkinson’s disease, there’s much more
we need to learn. We can see that
stimulation works but we don’t really know
how it works.”
Most patients suffering from Parkinson’s
disease first are treated with medication to
improve levels of dopamine, a chemical lost
when certain brain cells are damaged. But if
drugs fail to provide adequate symptom
control or if patients have unmanageable
side effects, deep brain stimulation may be
an option.
The device consists of electrical leads
implanted in the brain and a stimulator
located near the collarbone. The stimulator
is programmed with a remote, handheld
controller to block abnormal nerve signals
that cause uncontrollable muscle activity.
This procedure does not replace drugs but it
often allows their dosage to be reduced; the
combination provides better muscle and
movement control than drugs alone. Motor
function improvements range from 27 percent
to 72 percent within a year of deep brain
stimulation surgery, according to earlier
research.
The new study appears in the November issue
of the International Journal of Neuroscience.
Tagliati receives speaking honoraria and
consulting fees from Medtronic Inc.,
manufacturer of the stimulation device.