4.6 Article

Cerebellar Transcranial Alternating Current Stimulation in Essential Tremor Patients with Thalamic Stimulation: A Proof-of-Concept Study

期刊

NEUROTHERAPEUTICS
卷 20, 期 4, 页码 1109-1119

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s13311-023-01372-6

关键词

Essential tremor; Transcranial alternating current stimulation; Cerebellum; Deep brain stimulation; Motion capture

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This study investigated the effects of high-frequency non-invasive cerebellar transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) on patients with severe essential tremor (ET) who had previously undergone deep brain stimulation (DBS). The results showed that active-tACS significantly improved tremor amplitude and severity in the VIM-DBS group, while sham-tACS had no effect. In the non-VIM-DBS group, active-tACS also improved tremor amplitude and severity. These findings support the safety and potential efficacy of high-frequency cerebellar tACS in reducing ET amplitude and severity.
Essential tremor (ET) is a disabling condition resulting from a dysfunction of cerebello-thalamo-cortical circuitry. Deep brain stimulation (DBS) or lesion of the ventral-intermediate thalamic nucleus (VIM) is an effective treatment for severe ET. Transcranial cerebellar brain stimulation has recently emerged as a non-invasive potential therapeutic option. Here, we aim to investigate the effects of high-frequency non-invasive cerebellar transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) in severe ET patients already operated for VIM-DBS. Eleven ET patients with VIM-DBS, and 10 ET patients without VIM-DBS and matched for tremor severity, were included in this double-blind proof-of-concept controlled study. All patients received unilateral cerebellar sham-tACS and active-tACS for 10 min. Tremor severity was blindly assessed at baseline, without VIM-DBS, during sham-tACS, during and at 0, 20, 40 min after active-tACS, using kinetic recordings during holding posture and action ('nose-to-target') task and videorecorded Fahn-Tolosa-Marin (FTM) clinical scales. In the VIM-DBS group, active-tACS significantly improved both postural and action tremor amplitude and clinical (FTM scales) severity, relative to baseline, whereas sham-tACS did not, with a predominant effect for the ipsilateral arm. Tremor amplitude and clinical severity were also not significantly different between ON VIM-DBS and active-tACS conditions. In the non-VIM-DBS group, we also observed significant improvements in ipsilateral action tremor amplitude, and clinical severity after cerebellar active-tACS, with a trend for improved postural tremor amplitude. In non-VIM-DBS group, sham- active-tACS also decreased clinical scores. These data support the safety and potential efficacy of high-frequency cerebellar-tACS to reduce ET amplitude and severity.

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