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. 1999 Jul;212(1):143-50.
doi: 10.1148/radiology.212.1.r99jl34143.

Stereotactic radiosurgical pallidotomy and thalamotomy with the gamma knife: MR imaging findings with clinical correlation--preliminary experience

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Stereotactic radiosurgical pallidotomy and thalamotomy with the gamma knife: MR imaging findings with clinical correlation--preliminary experience

D P Friedman et al. Radiology. 1999 Jul.

Abstract

Purpose: To evaluate the temporal evolution and appearance of a radiosurgical lesion at magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and the clinical response in patients undergoing stereotactic radiosurgical pallidotomy or thalamotomy with the gamma knife.

Materials and methods: Seventeen patients with medically refractory movement disorders underwent stereotactic radiosurgical pallidotomy (n = 2) or thalamotomy (n = 15). A single dose of 120-140 Gy was administered to a target in the globus pallidus interna or ventralis intermedius thalamic nucleus. Postprocedure gadolinium-enhanced MR imaging and clinical assessment were performed at 1 month and 3 months.

Results: At 3 months, the radiosurgical lesion most commonly (n = 11) appeared as a ring-enhancing focus 5 mm or less in diameter surrounded by vasogenic edema that extended less than 7 mm in radius beyond the target. Five patients had ring-enhancing lesions 7 mm or more in diameter; four of these developed symptomatic perilesional edema at 3 (n = 2) or 8 (n = 2) months after the procedure. Onset of therapeutic effect began approximately 4 weeks after treatment. In the 15 patients with tremor, there was a mean decline of 2.1 on the Tremor Rating Scale.

Conclusion: Findings in this pilot study suggest that radiosurgical thalamotomy is a promising treatment for medically refractory tremor. Three-month follow-up MR studies show a ring-enhancing lesion surrounded by a variable amount of vasogenic edema. Visualization of the radiosurgical lesion and the clinical response are delayed compared to that with radio-frequency procedures.

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