Focused ultrasound in Parkinson's disease: A twofold path toward disease modification
- PMID: 31412430
- DOI: 10.1002/mds.27805
Focused ultrasound in Parkinson's disease: A twofold path toward disease modification
Abstract
A major unmet need in Parkinson's disease (PD) is to slow the inexorable progression of neurodegeneration. Clinical trials that evaluated promising pharmacological strategies have repeatedly failed. Nonetheless, the advent of focused ultrasound provides new opportunities toward the goal of developing a safe and effective disease-modifying therapy for PD. Here we discuss the rationale, possible avenues, and challenges along this path, exploiting the potential of focused ultrasound for (1) performing focal thermal lesions to restore the basic basal ganglia abnormalities associated with dopamine depletion, and (2) transiently opening the blood-brain barrier for targeted delivery of therapeutic agents. First, the classic idea of excitotoxicity mediated by hyperactivity of the subthalamic nucleus suggests that focused ultrasound subthalamotomy may offer a clinically viable disease-modifying therapy in very-early PD. Second, the concept of retrograde nigrostriatal neurodegeneration, supported by our recent cortical pathogenic theory of PD, points toward the putamen as a principal site for focused ultrasound blood-brain barrier opening and targeted drug delivery. In principle, both therapeutic strategies-subthalamotomy and putaminal blood-brain barrier opening-could eventually be applied in the same patient. Clinical application is still a long road ahead; nevertheless, focused ultrasound may open a twofold path toward disease modification in PD. © 2019 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.
Keywords: BBB opening; FUS; PD; disease-modifying; subthalamotomy.
© 2019 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.
References
-
- Dauer W, Przedborski S. Parkinson's disease: mechanisms and models. Neuron 2003;39(6):889-909.
-
- Kalia LV, Lang AE. Parkinson's disease. Lancet 2015;386(9996):896-912.
-
- Obeso JA, Stamelou M, Goetz CG, et al. Past, present, and future of Parkinson's disease: A special essay on the 200th Anniversary of the Shaking Palsy. Mov Disord 2017;32(9):1264-1310.
-
- Collier TJ, Kanaan NM, Kordower JH. Ageing as a primary risk factor for Parkinson's disease: evidence from studies of non-human primates. Nat Rev Neurosci 2011;12(6):359-366.
-
- Sidransky E, Lopez G. The link between the GBA gene and parkinsonism. Lancet Neurol 2012;11(11):986-998.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
