scholarly journals Probabilistic versus deterministic tractography for delineation of the cortico-subthalamic hyperdirect pathway in patients with Parkinson disease selected for deep brain stimulation

2017 ◽  
Vol 126 (5) ◽  
pp. 1657-1668 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mikkel V. Petersen ◽  
Torben E. Lund ◽  
Niels Sunde ◽  
Jesper Frandsen ◽  
Frederikke Rosendal ◽  
...  

OBJECTIVEDiffusion-weighted MRI (DWI) and tractography allows noninvasive mapping of the structural connections of the brain, and may provide important information for neurosurgical planning. The hyperdirect pathway, connecting the subthalamic nucleus (STN) with the motor cortex, is assumed to play a key role in mediating the effects of deep brain stimulation (DBS), which is an effective but poorly understood treatment for Parkinson disease. This study aimed to apply recent methodological advances in DWI acquisition and analysis to the delineation of the hyperdirect pathway in patients with Parkinson disease selected for surgery.METHODSHigh spatial and angular resolution DWI data were acquired preoperatively from 5 patients with Parkinson disease undergoing DBS. The authors compared the delineated hyperdirect pathways and associated STN target maps generated by 2 different tractography methods: a tensor-based deterministic method, typically available in clinical settings, and an advanced probabilistic method based on constrained spherical deconvolution. In addition, 10 high-resolution data sets with the same scanning parameters were acquired from a healthy control participant to assess the robustness of the tractography results.RESULTSBoth tractography approaches identified connections between the ipsilateral motor cortex and the STN. However, the 2 methods provided substantially different target regions in the STN, with the target center of gravity differing by > 1.4 mm on average. The probabilistic method (based on constrained spherical deconvolution) plausibly reconstructed a continuous set of connections from the motor cortex, terminating in the dorsolateral region of the STN. In contrast, the tensor-based method reconstructed a comparatively sparser and more variable subset of connections. Furthermore, across the control scans, the probabilistic method identified considerably more consistent targeting regions within the STN compared with the deterministic tensor-based method, which demonstrated a 1.9–2.4 times higher variation.CONCLUSIONSThese data provide a strong impetus for the use of a robust probabilistic tractography framework based on constrained spherical deconvolution, or similar advanced DWI models, in clinical settings. The inherent limitations and demonstrated inaccuracy of the tensor-based method leave it questionable for use in high-precision stereotactic DBS surgery. The authors have also described a straightforward method for importing tractography-derived information into any clinical neuronavigation system, based on the generation of track-density images.

Neurosurgery ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 64 (CN_suppl_1) ◽  
pp. 275-275
Author(s):  
Yalda Shahriari ◽  
Mahsa Malekmohammadi ◽  
Andrew B O’Keeffe ◽  
Xiao Hu ◽  
Nader Pouratian

Abstract INTRODUCTION Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) of Globus Pallidus internus (GPi) is an effective therapy to manage Parkinson disease (PD) symptoms. Despite its documented clinical efficacy, the underlying neural oscillatory mechanisms of GPi-DBS is still not well understood. In this study, we evaluate the hypothesis that therapeutic effects of DBS are mediated by changes in the cortical-subcortical coherence. METHODS Seven patients with PD underwent GPi-DBS implantation. Simultaneous recordings of GPi local field potentials (LFPs) and ipsilateral motor cortex electrocorticography (ECoG) were obtained intra-operatively both off and on GPi stimulation. Eighteen seconds of data were used for each condition and the mean coherence was calculated over five different frequency bands of Alpha (8-12 Hz), Low Beta (13-20 Hz), High Beta (21-35 Hz), Low Gamma (36-80 Hz), and High Gamma (81-100 Hz). RESULTS >We found a statistically significant (p-value corrected <0.02, Friedman test) reduction of pallidocortical coherence in the High Beta frequency band. No statistically significant difference was observed in the other frequency bands between off and on DBS conditions. This decrease was specific to the primary motor cortex, and no statistical cortical-subcortical coherence difference was observed at the premotor and sensorimotor sites between the two conditions. CONCLUSION These findings suggest pallidocortical High Beta coupling may be a critical mechanism in the pathophysiology of PD. GPi-DBS might, therefore, exert their therapeutic effect by inhibition of this exaggerated pallidocortical High Beta coupling. A better understanding of the DBS mechanisms on the alleviation of PD symptoms can contribute to the development of closed-loop DBS in which the patients' neurophysiological parameters will be considered in optimizing the DBS parameters.


Neurosurgery ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 76 (6) ◽  
pp. 756-765 ◽  
Author(s):  
Srivatsan Pallavaram ◽  
Pierre-François D'Haese ◽  
Wendell Lake ◽  
Peter E. Konrad ◽  
Benoit M. Dawant ◽  
...  

Abstract BACKGROUND: Finding the optimal location for the implantation of the electrode in deep brain stimulation (DBS) surgery is crucial for maximizing the therapeutic benefit to the patient. Such targeting is challenging for several reasons, including anatomic variability between patients as well as the lack of consensus about the location of the optimal target. OBJECTIVE: To compare the performance of popular manual targeting methods against a fully automatic nonrigid image registration-based approach. METHODS: In 71 Parkinson disease subthalamic nucleus (STN)-DBS implantations, an experienced functional neurosurgeon selected the target manually using 3 different approaches: indirect targeting using standard stereotactic coordinates, direct targeting based on the patient magnetic resonance imaging, and indirect targeting relative to the red nucleus. Targets were also automatically predicted by using a leave-one-out approach to populate the CranialVault atlas with the use of nonrigid image registration. The different targeting methods were compared against the location of the final active contact, determined through iterative clinical programming in each individual patient. RESULTS: Targeting by using standard stereotactic coordinates corresponding to the center of the motor territory of the STN had the largest targeting error (3.69 mm), followed by direct targeting (3.44 mm), average stereotactic coordinates of active contacts from this study (3.02 mm), red nucleus-based targeting (2.75 mm), and nonrigid image registration-based automatic predictions using the CranialVault atlas (2.70 mm). The CranialVault atlas method had statistically smaller variance than all manual approaches. CONCLUSION: Fully automatic targeting based on nonrigid image registration with the use of the CranialVault atlas is as accurate and more precise than popular manual methods for STN-DBS.


2018 ◽  
Vol 115 ◽  
pp. e206-e217 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takao Nozaki ◽  
Tetsuya Asakawa ◽  
Kenji Sugiyama ◽  
Yuki Koda ◽  
Ayumi Shimoda ◽  
...  

Neurosurgery ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 77 (4) ◽  
pp. N17-N19
Author(s):  
Yousef Salimpour ◽  
William S. Anderson

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