The effects of posterior internal pallidal ablation (GPi pallidotomy) on parkinsonian signs and symptoms were studied in 15 patients with medically intractable Parkinson's disease (PD). The sensorimotor territory of the internal portion of the globus pallidus and the adjacent optic tract and internal capsule were identified with microelectrode recording and stimulation. Radiofrequency lesions were then created in the identified sensorimotor territory. Pallidotomy significantly improved all cardinal parkinsonian motor signs (tremor, rigidity, akinesia/bradykinesia, and gait dysfunction) and reduced drug-induced motor fluctuations and dyskinesias. The improvements occurred predominately contralateral to the lesion, but were also present ipsilaterally. Early postoperative (3-month), mean total United Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale scores improved by 30.1% from preoperative values. Mean combined "on/off" Schwab and England Scale scores, a measure of functional independence, increased from 48.8% to 73.0% postoperatively. The mean total United Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale and Schwab and England scores did not show a statistically significant decline over the 1-year postoperative period. Surgery resulted in little morbidity, including a lack of significant deficits on neuropsychological and psychiatric testing. Physical and social functioning and vitality measures on the Medical Outcome Scale also showed significant improvement over the postoperative period. The findings of this pilot study demonstrate that ablation of the sensorimotor portion of the internal pallidum is a highly effective treatment for advanced PD, with benefits sustained at 1 year.
Object. The authors studied a consecutive series of patients with spinal stenosis in whom surgery was performed by a single surgeon who used a microscopic tubular retractor system (METRx-MD); patients underwent prospective evaluation involving radiography and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging.The objective was to assess the feasibility and surgery-related efficacy of performing unilateral-approach bilateral decompression and utilization of METRx-MD instrumentation in patients with spinal stenosis.Methods. Seventeen consecutive patients with spinal stenosis underwent bilateral decompression; surgery was performed via a unilateral approach using METRx-MD instrumentation. The procedures were performed on an outpatient basis after induction of general anesthesia. Preoperative and 3-month follow-up plain radiographs with flexion—extension views were obtained. Preoperative and postoperative MR imaging was also performed. All studies were assessed by a single radiologist blinded to the clinical results.Twenty-two levels were surgically decompressed. The mean operative time was 90 minutes and the mean blood loss was 28 ml per level. Preoperatively stenosis was severe at 13 levels, moderate/severe at eight, and moderate at one. Postoperatively stenosis was absent at 13 levels, mild at seven, mild/moderate at one, and moderate at one. Preoperatively degenerative spondylolisthesis was documented in eight patients, with flexion—extension radiography revealing motion in three cases. On early (3-month) postoperative x-ray films there was no evidence of progression in any case. Grade I spondylolisthesis developed postoperatively in one patient, who remained asymptomatic.Conclusions. Minimally invasive bilateral decompression and instrumentation-assisted fusion can be successfully performed via a unilateral approach in patients with acquired spinal stenosis; the procedure can be undertaken on an outpatient basis, with reasonable operative times, minimal blood loss, and acceptable morbidity rates.
Human nails pre-treated with TA in vitro had a 3.8-fold increase in caffeine flux compared to the control (TA-free solution). This study illustrated the potential to use human nail clipping swelling as a surrogate marker of PE activity for topical ungual drug delivery.
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