Electrode displacement after intracerebral hematoma as a complication of a deep brain stimulation procedure

Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is nowadays considered a safe and effective procedure for various movement disorders in which conservative treatments have failed to show significant therapeutic results. One of the most common complications of definitive electrode positioning is intraparenchymal hemorrh...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Neuropsychiatric disease and treatment Vol. 5; no. default; pp. 183 - 187
Main Authors: Servello, Domenico, Sassi, Marco, Bastianello, Stefano, Poloni, Guy Umberto, Mancini, Francesca, Pacchetti, Claudio
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: New Zealand Taylor & Francis Ltd 01-01-2009
Dove Press
Dove Medical Press
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Summary:Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is nowadays considered a safe and effective procedure for various movement disorders in which conservative treatments have failed to show significant therapeutic results. One of the most common complications of definitive electrode positioning is intraparenchymal hemorrhage. Authors report the case of a 55-year-old female patient treated for Parkinson's disease in which intraparenchymal hemorrhage developed after DBS procedure, leading to significant (about 8 mm at the neuroradiological controls) displacement of an otherwise correctly positioned DBS electrode. After conservative management, the hematoma spontaneously resolved. Late neuroradiological controls documented correct, symmetrically positioned electrodes, comparable to the immediate postoperative controls. Six months follow-up endpoint results of the DBS treatment were considered satisfying by an independent neurologist, with modest residual neurological deficits, demonstrating that re-positioning of the electrode was unnecessary in this rare complication.
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ISSN:1176-6328
1176-6328
1178-2021
DOI:10.2147/NDT.S4892