Deep brain stimulation for movement disorders before DBS for movement disorders.

Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is an established surgical treatment for Parkinson's disease (PD), essential tremor and dystonia. It is generally acknowledged that the development of DBS as we know it today started with the publication of Benabid, Pollak et al in 1987 on thalamic DBS for tremor. This technique gained momentum in the mid-Nineties after that Pollak and Benabid introduced the subthalamic nucleus as a target in advanced PD. This paper reviews the gestational pre-natal era of deep brain stimulation, before 1987. The origin of DBS can be traced back to the practice of intra-operative electrical stimulation, used for target exploration prior to lesioning, during the early years of stereotactic functional neurosurgery. During the 60s, Sem-Jacobsen and others implanted externalised electrodes which were used for intermittent stimulation and evaluation during weeks or months, prior to subsequent ablation of thalamic and other basal ganglia targets. In the early 70s Bechtereva treated PD patients using "therapeutic electrical stimulation" through electrodes implanted for up to 1.5 years. In the late 70s and early 80s the term Deep Brain Stimulation was coined and few groups attempted treatment of Parkinson's disease, non-Parkinsonian tremor and dystonia with high-frequency stimulation using chronically implanted DBS systems. Cumbersome, un-sophisticated DBS hardware, together with the general decline of all surgery for PD following the introduction of levodopa, may have contributed to the lack of popularity of old-times DBS. It is to the credit of the Grenoble Group to have reinvented, modernised and expanded modern DBS in surgical treatment of movement disorders.

[1]  A. Upton,et al.  Safety and efficacy of chronic stimulation. , 1977, Neurosurgery.

[2]  A. Benabid,et al.  Long-term suppression of tremor by chronic stimulation of the ventral intermediate thalamic nucleus , 1991, The Lancet.

[3]  A. Lozano,et al.  Highly cited works in neurosurgery. Part I: the 100 top-cited papers in neurosurgical journals. , 2010, Journal of neurosurgery.

[4]  Dudley H. Davis,et al.  Textbook of Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery , 1998 .

[5]  M. Hariz,et al.  From functional neurosurgery to “interventional” neurology: Survey of publications on thalamotomy, pallidotomy, and deep brain stimulation for Parkinson's disease from 1966 to 2001 , 2003, Movement disorders : official journal of the Movement Disorder Society.

[6]  Smirnov Vm,et al.  Therapeutic electric stimulation of deep brain structures , 1972 .

[7]  T. Riechert Stereotactic brain operations : methods, clinical aspects, indications , 1980 .

[8]  M. Hariz,et al.  Leksell's posteroventral pallidotomy in the treatment of Parkinson's disease. , 1992, Journal of neurosurgery.

[9]  R. Bakay,et al.  Deep brain stimulation for movement disorders. , 1998, Neurosurgery clinics of North America.

[10]  A. Benabid,et al.  Combined (thalamotomy and stimulation) stereotactic surgery of the VIM thalamic nucleus for bilateral Parkinson disease. , 1987, Applied neurophysiology.

[11]  E. Spiegel,et al.  Stereotaxic Apparatus for Operations on the Human Brain. , 1947, Science.

[12]  A L Benabid,et al.  [Effects of the stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus in Parkinson disease]. , 1993, Revue neurologique.

[13]  L. Merienne,et al.  Control of dyskinesias due to sensory deafferentation by means of thalamic stimulation. , 1980, Acta neurochirurgica. Supplementum.

[14]  Bechtereva Np,et al.  Implanted Electrodes: Experimentation on Humans? , 1971 .

[15]  Joachim K. Krauss,et al.  Deep Brain Stimulation for Dystonia in Adults , 2003, Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery.

[16]  F Mundinger,et al.  Programmed stimulation for control of chronic pain and motor diseases. , 1982, Applied neurophysiology.

[17]  V. Visser-Vandewalle,et al.  The neurosurgical treatment of addiction. , 2008, Neurosurgical focus.

[18]  O. Andy Thalamic stimulation for control of movement disorders. , 1983, Applied neurophysiology.

[19]  A. Upton,et al.  Chronic cerebellar stimulation (CCS) and deep brain stimulation (DBS) in involuntary movement disorders. , 1982, Applied neurophysiology.

[20]  P. Gildenberg History Repeats Itself , 2004, Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery.

[21]  Jean Siegfried,et al.  Bilateral chronic electrostimulation of ventroposterolateral pallidum: a new therapeutic approach for alleviating all parkinsonian symptoms. , 1994 .

[22]  A. Benabid,et al.  Electrical stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus in advanced Parkinson's disease. , 1998, The New England journal of medicine.

[23]  P. Gildenberg,et al.  Evolution of Neuromodulation , 2005, Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery.

[24]  Sem-Jacobsen Cw Depth-electrographic observations related to Parkinson's disease. Recording and electrical stimulation in the area around the third ventricle. , 1966 .

[25]  B. Bewernick,et al.  Deep brain stimulation for psychiatric disorders--state of the art. , 2009, Advances and technical standards in neurosurgery.

[26]  Sem-Jacobsen Cw Vegetative changes in response to electrical brain stimulation. , 1968 .

[27]  G. Boczán,et al.  Subthalamotomy in Parkinson's disease. , 1970, Confinia neurologica.

[28]  R HASSLER,et al.  Physiological observations in stereotaxic operations in extrapyramidal motor disturbances. , 1960, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[29]  J. Brice,et al.  SUPPRESSION OF INTENTION TREMOR BY CONTINGENT DEEP-BRAIN STIMULATION , 1980, The Lancet.

[30]  [Treatment of various dyskinesias by intermittent thalamic stimulation]. , 1982, Neuro-Chirurgie.

[31]  Patrick J. Kelly Stereotactic surgery: what is past is prologue. , 2000 .

[32]  A. N. Bondartchuk,et al.  Structural-functional organization of the human brain and the pathophysiology of the Parkinsonian type hyperkineses. , 1972, Confinia neurologica.

[33]  N. Vayssiere,et al.  [Treatment of early-onset generalized dystonia by chronic bilateral stimulation of the internal globus pallidus. Apropos of a case]. , 1999, Neuro-Chirurgie.

[34]  S. Tisch,et al.  Deep brain stimulation of the posterior subthalamic area in the treatment of movement disorders , 2012 .

[35]  A. N. Bondartchuk,et al.  Method of electrostimulation of the deep brain structures in treatment of some chronic diseases. , 1975, Confinia neurologica.

[36]  S. Hemm,et al.  Treatment of DYT1-generalised dystonia by stimulation of the internal globus pallidus , 2000, The Lancet.

[37]  Joshua Rosenow,et al.  Irving S. Cooper and His Role in Intracranial Stimulation for Movement Disorders and Epilepsy , 2003, Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery.

[38]  A. Benabid,et al.  Effect on parkinsonian signs and symptoms of bilateral subthalamic nucleus stimulation , 1995, The Lancet.

[39]  C. Sem-Jacobsen DEPTH ELECTROGRAPHIC STIMULATION AND TREATMENT OF PATIENTS WITH PARKINSON'S DISEASE INCLUDING NEUROSURGICAL TECHNIQUE , 1965, Acta neurologica Scandinavica. Supplementum.

[40]  André Parent,et al.  Jules Bernard Luys and the subthalamic nucleus , 2002, Movement Disorders.

[41]  A. Upton,et al.  Reversibility of chronic neurologic deficits. Some effects of electrical stimulation of the thalamus and internal capsule in man. , 1980, Applied neurophysiology.

[42]  J. Turner Third Symposium on Parkinson's Disease , 1970 .

[43]  F. Mundinger [New stereotactic treatment of spasmodic torticollis with a brain stimulation system (author's transl)]. , 1977, Medizinische Klinik.

[44]  P. Derome,et al.  [CHARACTERISTIC ELECTRIC ACTIVITIES OF SOME CEREBRAL STRUCTURES IN MAN]. , 1963, Annales de chirurgie.

[45]  J. Waltz,et al.  Chronic cerebellar stimulation in cerebral palsy , 1976, Neurology.