Deep Brain Stimulation Improves Symptoms of Spasmodic Dysphonia Through Targeting of Thalamic Sensorimotor Connectivity

Author:

Hart Michael G.1ORCID,Polyhronopoulos Nancy2,Sandhu Mandeep K.2,Honey Christopher R.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. St George's, University of London & St George's Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Institute of Molecular and Clinical Sciences, Neurosciences Research Centre, London, UK;

2. Division of Neurosurgery, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Spasmodic dysphonia is a dystonia of the vocal chords producing difficulty with speech. Current hypotheses are that this is a condition of dysregulated thalamic sensory motor integration. A recent randomized controlled trial of thalamic deep brain stimulation (DBS) demonstrated its safety and efficacy. Our objective was to determine whether the outcome could be predicted by stimulation of thalamic sensorimotor areas and adjacent white matter connectivity as assessed by diffusion tractography. METHODS: A cohort of 6 participants undergoing thalamic DBS for adductor spasmodic dysphonia was studied. Electrodes were localized with the Lead-DBS toolbox. Group-based analyses were performed with atlases, coordinates, and using voxel-based symptom mapping. Diffusion tensor imaging (3 T, 64 directions, 2-mm isotropic) was used to perform individual probabilistic tractography (cerebellothalamic tract and pallidothalamic tract) and segmentation of the thalamus. Monopolar review was performed at 0.5 V and binarised as effective or ineffective. RESULTS: Effective contacts stimulated more of thalamic sensorimotor areas than ineffective contacts (P < .05, false discovery rate corrected). This effect was consistent across analytical and statistical techniques. Group-level and tractography analyses did not identify a specific “sweet spot” suggesting the benefit of DBS is derived from modulating individual thalamic sensorimotor areas. Stimulations at 1 year involved predicted thalamic sensorimotor regions with additional cerebellothalamic tract involvement. CONCLUSION: Stimulation of thalamic sensorimotor areas was associated with improvement in symptoms of spasmodic dysphonia. These data are consistent with DBS acting on pathophysiologically dysregulated thalamic sensorimotor integration in spasmodic dysphonia.

Funder

National Spasmodic Dysphonia Association

Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute

Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Surgery

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