4.7 Article

Spinal cord stimulation therapy for gait dysfunction in progressive supranuclear palsy patients

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY
Volume 268, Issue 3, Pages 989-996

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00415-020-10233-7

Keywords

Progressive supranuclear palsy; Atypical parkinsonian; Spinal cord stimulation; Freezing of gait; Gait dysfunction; Spatiotemporal; Gait analysis; Neuromodulation

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This study found that spinal cord stimulation (SCS) therapy can improve freezing of gait (FOG) and gait symptoms in Richardson's syndrome PSP patients, suggesting early intervention with SCS for dopaminergic-resistant gait should be considered.
Background There are no effective symptomatic treatments for progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP). Recent studies report benefits of spinal cord stimulation (SCS) for freezing of gait (FOG) and gait disorders in Parkinson's disease and atypical Parkinsonism patients. This is the first study to report therapeutic effects of SCS in Richardson's syndrome PSP (PSP-RS) patients. Methods Epidural SCS was implanted in three female PSP-RS participants (3.2 +/- 1.3 years with disease). Six programs (300-400 mu s/30-130 Hz) were randomly tested at suprathreshold intensity on separate days. The setting that best improved gait/FOG was used daily by each participant in the study. Protokinetics walkway captured spatiotemporal gait measures and FOG episodes (turning on the spot and while walking) and clinical scales including FOG questionnaire, UPDRS-III (OFF-/ON-l-dopa), and participant-perceived global impression of change (GISC) were collected at pre-SCS, and 3, 6, 12 months post-SCS. Results Participant #1 demonstrated the highest GISC score (6.5/10) with a consistent reduction of FOGs by 43.8%, UPDRS-III score (- 5 points), and improved step length and stride velocity (33.6%) while maintaining al-dopa response of similar to 12% over the 12 months. Participant #2, walking FOG frequency and turning duration was reduced by 39.0% (OFF-l-dopa), and ON-l-dopa UPDRS-III score worsened (+ 5 points) at 12 months. Participant #3, FOG frequency reduced by 75% up to 6 months rating a GISC 3/10 score, however disease severity worsened at 12 months. Ambulatory gait parameters universally improved by 29.6% in all participants. Conclusion The results support the benefit of SCS for FOG and gait symptoms in PSP-RS and suggests early SCS intervention for dopaminergic-resistant gait should be considered.

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