Surgery
Brain surgery may be considered when drugs fails to control
symptoms of
Parkinson's disease or cause severe or disabling side
effects.8
Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is a technique
for treating Parkinson's disease. It affects movement by using electrical
impulses to stimulate a target area in the brain. The electrical impulses are
generated by wire electrodes surgically placed in the brain. Deep brain
stimulation may be used in addition to therapy with levodopa or other drugs
when drugs alone do not control symptoms adequately. This technique is the
preferred surgical method of treating most cases of advanced Parkinson's
disease. It does not destroy brain tissue and has fewer risks than older, more
destructive surgical methods, such as pallidotomy and thalamotomy.8
Pallidotomy and thalamotomy are rarely done anymore. They involve the precise
destruction of very small areas in the deep part of the brain that cause
symptoms.
Neurotransplantation surgery is an
experimental procedure being studied for the treatment of Parkinson's disease.
It involves implanting cells that produce dopamine into the brain. Information
about the effectiveness of neurotransplantation is limited, and it is not a
proven treatment or a realistic option for most people at this time.
Surgery Choices
- Deep brain
stimulation
- Pallidotomy
- Thalamotomy
- Neurotransplantation
What To Think About
A neurologist with special training in
Parkinson's disease is most often the best kind of
doctor to make a decision about surgery. If you might benefit from surgery or
deep brain stimulation, your neurologist can refer you to a brain surgeon with
experience doing these operations.
Surgery most often becomes a treatment option for people when
Parkinson's disease progresses to the point that drugs can no longer control
symptoms adequately. With advanced disease, existing symptoms may get worse, or
a person may develop new symptoms that drugs cannot control. (However, when a
person has severe one-sided tremor, deep brain stimulation [DBS] may be
considered much sooner because this symptom often responds better to DBS than
to medicine.)
People who have extremely advanced Parkinson's or who have other
serious conditions (such as heart or lung disease, cancer, or kidney failure)
are not usually good candidates for surgery. Surgery is usually not considered
for people who have
dementia or psychiatric disorders.
Surgery is not a cure for Parkinson's disease. Drugs are usually
still necessary after surgery, but surgery can reduce the number and amount of
drugs needed to control symptoms. This reduces the side effects caused by drugs
while at the same time controlling symptoms.
Deep brain stimulation
Deep brain stimulation (DBS) neither cures Parkinson's disease
nor eliminates the need for medicine. DBS of the thalamus is done to treat
disabling tremor caused by Parkinson's disease. Procedures that stimulate the
subthalamic nucleus and the globus pallidus control a wider range of symptoms
(in addition to tremor) and are used more often than stimulation of the
thalamus.
Pallidotomy and thalamotomy
Few brain surgeons (neurosurgeons) perform pallidotomy, and
neither pallidotomy nor thalamotomy is commonly done anymore.
Neurotransplantation
The neurotransplantation procedure is still experimental and
has been done on only a very small number of people. Its full effects take
several months or longer to appear and no proven benefit has been documented to
date.