Tag: essential tremor

‘Sweet Spot’ for Focused Ultrasound Provides Relief from Essential Tremor

A surgical lesion site is highlighted in orange following MR-guided focused ultrasound treatment. Structural brain connections associated with optimal tremor response or side effects, as identified in the present study, are depicted in various colors. The background features an ultra-high resolution MRI image acquired at Massachusetts General Hospital. Image courtesy of Andreas Horn, Mass General Brigham.

Essential tremor, a common neurological movement disorder, causes uncontrollable shaking, most often in the hands, but it can also occur in the arms, legs, head, voice, or torso. Essential tremor impacts an estimated 1% of the worldwide population and around 5% of people over 60.

Investigators from Mass General Brigham identified a specific subregion of the brain’s thalamus that, when included during magnetic resonance-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) treatment, can result in optimal and significant tremor improvements while reducing side effects. Their results are published in Science Advances.

“This one-time, noninvasive treatment can have immediate, long-lasting and lifechanging effects for patients and was pioneered here at Brigham and Women’s Hospital 30 years ago,” said co-senior author G. Rees Cosgrove, MD, FRCSC, director of functional neurosurgery at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. “The results of this study will help make the procedure even more safe and effective than it already is and will help other centres around the world improve their outcomes.”

MRgFUS treatment of essential tremor creates a small, permanent lesion in a specific nucleus in the thalamus that is thought to be part of the brain circuit mediating the disorder and disrupts the tremor-causing activity. The research team analysed data from 351 thalamotomy patients that were treated across three international hospitals, the largest cohort assessed to date, to identify the optimal location for this procedure and better understand its impacts on clinical improvements and side effects.

The study identified a set of optimal sites and brain connections to target, as well as locations and connections to avoid that lead to side effects. The team then tested whether this ‘sweet spot’ could be used as a model to predict the outcomes in a cohort of patients treated with the same procedure at another centre, which proved true. The more the ‘sweet spot’ was lesioned, the better the outcome was in all patients’ one-year, post-procedure comparison data. According to the researchers, when thalamotomy patients have good tremor control at one year, it is typically sustained over multiple years.

“Seeing how this procedure can make such a huge impact on patients’ lives is what motivated me to pursue this research,” said lead author Melissa Chua, MD, a senior resident in the Brigham’s Department of Neurosurgery. “It is very exciting to have such robust validation and to be moving toward this treatment becoming even more precise and personalized in the future.”

Next, the team plans to further analyse patient data for a more detailed picture of the evolution of this technology and how patient outcomes have improved, to fully understand the parameters that go into achieving long-term tremor control and minimise side effects.

“It is incredible when you can provide a patient with relief from these tremors,” Cosgrove said. “It is like a gift when patients who have not been able to sing, speak in public, write, or even drink from a cup for years can once again do so – we see it in case after case.”

Source: Mass General Brigham

Essential Tremor Increases Cognitive Impairment Risks over Time

Photo by Matthias Zomer on Pexels

Essential tremor, a nervous system disorder that causes rhythmic shaking, is one of the most common movement disorders. A new study published in the Annals of Neurology reveals details on the increased risk of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and dementia that individuals with essential tremor may face.

The research represents the longest available longitudinal prospective study of rates of MCI and dementia in people with essential tremor. The study enrolled 222 patients, 177 of whom participated in periodic evaluations over an average follow-up of 5 years.

Investigators observed a cumulative prevalence of 26.6% and 18.5% for MCI and dementia, respectively. They also noted a cumulative incidence of 18.2% and 11.2% for MCI and dementia, respectively. Each year, 3.9% of patients with normal cognition “converted” to having MCI, and 12.2% of those with MCI “converted” to having dementia.

“We know from related research that the presence of cognitive impairment in patients with essential tremor has meaningful clinical consequences. For example, patients with essential tremor who are diagnosed with dementia are more likely to need to use a walker or wheelchair, to employ a home health aide, and to reside in non-independent living arrangements than are patients with essential tremor without dementia,” said corresponding author Elan D. Louis, MD, MS, of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. “With this in mind, the findings of the present study highlight the importance of cognitive screening and monitoring in patients with essential tremor. Early detection of impairment may provide opportunities for interventions that may slow further cognitive decline and improve the quality of life of patients and their families.”

Source: Wiley