4.3 Review

Botulinum toxin therapy of dystonia

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEURAL TRANSMISSION
Volume 128, Issue 4, Pages 531-537

Publisher

SPRINGER WIEN
DOI: 10.1007/s00702-020-02266-z

Keywords

Botulinum toxin; Therapy; Dystonia; Treatment strategies

Funding

  1. Projekt DEAL

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Botulinum toxin is widely used to treat muscle hyperactivity syndromes, with dystonia being one of the key indications. The peripheral paresis produced by BT injections into dystonic muscles is localized, controllable, and lasts around 3 months. Adverse effects are transient and mild, making long-term application safe and effective.
Botulinum toxin (BT) is used to treat a large number of muscle hyperactivity syndromes. Its use in dystonia, however, is still one of the most important indications for BT therapy. When BT is injected into dystonic muscles, it produces a peripheral paresis which is localised, well controllable and follows a distinct and predictable time course of around 3 months. Adverse effects are always transient and usually mild, long-term application is safe. With this profile BT can be used to treat cranial dystonia, cervical dystonia and limb dystonia including writer's and musician's cramps. The recent introduction of BT high dose therapy also allows to treat more wide-spread dystonia including segmental and generalised dystonia. BT can easily be combined with other anti-dystonic treatments such as deep brain stimulation and intrathecal baclofen application. Best treatment results are obtained when BT therapy is integrated in the multimodal and long-term 'multilayer concept of treatment of dystonia'. The biggest challenge for the future will be to deliver state of the art BT therapy to all dystonia patients in need, regardless of whether they live in developed countries or beyond.

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