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Operative and hardware complications of deep brain stimulation for movement disorders

Operative and hardware complications of deep brain stimulation for movement disorders
Operative and hardware complications of deep brain stimulation for movement disorders
The objective of this investigation was to present the operative and hardware complications encountered during follow-up of patients with in situ deep brain stimulators. The study took the form of a retrospective chart review on a series of consecutive patients who were treated successfully with insertion of deep brain stimulators at a single centre by a single surgeon between 1999 and 2005. During the study period, a total of 60 patients underwent 96 procedures for implantation of unilateral or bilateral DBS electrodes. The mean follow-up period was 43.7 months ( range 6 - 78 months) from the time of the first procedure. No patients were lost to follow-up or died. Eighteen patients (30%) developed 28 adverse events, requiring 28 electrodes to be replaced. Seven patients developed two adverse events and two patients developed three adverse events. The rate of adverse events per electrode-year was 8%. We observed a higher proportion of early complications ( 56 months postoperatively) in patients with Parkinson's disease, while dystonic patients had more late complications ( 46 months postoperatively) and no early complications. Thirty per cent of our patients developed an adverse event that could potentially lead to revision of the implanted hardware. In patients with Parkinson's disease most of the complications tend to occur during the first 6 months postoperatively, while in dystonic patients most occur between 12 and 24 months postoperatively.
deep brain stimulation, globus-pallidus internus, thalamotomy, disorders, adverse events, tremor, cost-analysis, parkinsons-disease, follow-up, complications, movement disorders, disease, surgery, primary generalized dystonia, disorder
0268-8697
290-295
Paluzzi, A.
98130482-6cff-49a6-9fbe-e143155a2f88
Belli, A.
173116e3-a9e8-4ed2-afc4-932f7001eeb0
Bain, P.
b568f58a-768e-4f4d-b592-4921b5948122
Liu, X.
878efcac-76c6-4ca0-8f4a-425f1e9abdac
Aziz, T.M.
5de6f3b6-27f6-419f-b732-358ca22323a9
Paluzzi, A.
98130482-6cff-49a6-9fbe-e143155a2f88
Belli, A.
173116e3-a9e8-4ed2-afc4-932f7001eeb0
Bain, P.
b568f58a-768e-4f4d-b592-4921b5948122
Liu, X.
878efcac-76c6-4ca0-8f4a-425f1e9abdac
Aziz, T.M.
5de6f3b6-27f6-419f-b732-358ca22323a9

Paluzzi, A., Belli, A., Bain, P., Liu, X. and Aziz, T.M. (2006) Operative and hardware complications of deep brain stimulation for movement disorders. British Journal of Neurosurgery, 20 (5), 290-295. (doi:10.1080/02688690601012175).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The objective of this investigation was to present the operative and hardware complications encountered during follow-up of patients with in situ deep brain stimulators. The study took the form of a retrospective chart review on a series of consecutive patients who were treated successfully with insertion of deep brain stimulators at a single centre by a single surgeon between 1999 and 2005. During the study period, a total of 60 patients underwent 96 procedures for implantation of unilateral or bilateral DBS electrodes. The mean follow-up period was 43.7 months ( range 6 - 78 months) from the time of the first procedure. No patients were lost to follow-up or died. Eighteen patients (30%) developed 28 adverse events, requiring 28 electrodes to be replaced. Seven patients developed two adverse events and two patients developed three adverse events. The rate of adverse events per electrode-year was 8%. We observed a higher proportion of early complications ( 56 months postoperatively) in patients with Parkinson's disease, while dystonic patients had more late complications ( 46 months postoperatively) and no early complications. Thirty per cent of our patients developed an adverse event that could potentially lead to revision of the implanted hardware. In patients with Parkinson's disease most of the complications tend to occur during the first 6 months postoperatively, while in dystonic patients most occur between 12 and 24 months postoperatively.

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More information

Published date: 2006
Keywords: deep brain stimulation, globus-pallidus internus, thalamotomy, disorders, adverse events, tremor, cost-analysis, parkinsons-disease, follow-up, complications, movement disorders, disease, surgery, primary generalized dystonia, disorder

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 62531
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/62531
ISSN: 0268-8697
PURE UUID: a7aee279-ec01-474e-9732-5a7cf1107ef1

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Date deposited: 11 Sep 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 11:31

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Contributors

Author: A. Paluzzi
Author: A. Belli
Author: P. Bain
Author: X. Liu
Author: T.M. Aziz

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