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Effects of medial thalamotomy and pallido-thalamic tractotomy on sleep and waking EEG in pain and parkinsonian patients
- Source :
- Clinical Neurophysiology. 111:1266-1275
- Publication Year :
- 2000
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2000.
-
Abstract
- Objectives : Investigation of sleep and sleep EEG before and after stereotactic neurosurgery. Methods : All-night polysomnographic recordings were obtained in 3 neurogenic pain patients and 3 parkinsonian patients. One subject of each group was recorded in addition 3 months after surgery. Stereotactic operations were performed in the medial thalamus and on the pallido-thalamic tract to relieve neurogenic pain and parkinsonian symptoms, respectively. Results : Sleep efficiency was little affected by the surgical intervention in neurogenic pain patients and a dramatic reduction in REM sleep occurred, which had recovered in the subject recorded after 3 months. After the surgery parkinsonian patients showed an increase in total sleep time and in sleep efficiency, and a decrease in REM sleep latency. Sleep efficiency remained elevated in the 3 months follow-up. Medial thalamotomy abolished spindle frequency activity (SFA) in the power and coherence spectra in non-REM sleep stage 2 systematically. Pallido-thalamic tractotomy attenuated SFA only to varying degrees. After 3 months SFA had reemerged. The alpha peak of the waking EEG was shifted to lower frequencies after surgery in 5 of 6 patients and had reverted to the original frequency 3 months later. Conclusions : Medial thalamotomy or pallido-thalamic tractotomy had acute and reversible effects on the EEG and long-term deleterious side effects of stereotactic surgery on sleep and sleep EEG are improbable. The results provide further evidence for the involvement of the human thalamus in the generation of sleep spindles.
- Subjects :
- Male
Sleep Wake Disorders
Stereotactic surgery
Polysomnography
medicine.medical_treatment
Remission, Spontaneous
Thalamus
Pain
Sleep spindle
Electroencephalography
Globus Pallidus
Stereotaxic Techniques
Physiology (medical)
medicine
Humans
Wakefulness
Aged
Sleep Stages
medicine.diagnostic_test
Thalamotomy
Brain
Parkinson Disease
Middle Aged
Sleep in non-human animals
Sensory Systems
Neurology
Anesthesia
Female
Neurology (clinical)
Sleep
Psychology
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 13882457
- Volume :
- 111
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Clinical Neurophysiology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....98d10c004022c76eaec49b93d3996d9d
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/s1388-2457(00)00295-9