Fine J, Duff J, Chen R, Chir B, Hutchison W, Lozano A M, Lang A E
Department of Medicine, Toronto Western Hospital, University of Toronto, ON, Canada.
N Engl J Med. 2000 Jun 8;342(23):1708-14. doi: 10.1056/NEJM200006083422304.
Although the short-term benefits of posteroventral pallidotomy for patients with advanced Parkinson's disease have been well documented, little is known about the long-term outcome of the procedure.
We conducted a long-term follow-up study of a cohort of 40 patients who had undergone unilateral posteroventral medial pallidotomy between 1993 and 1996. Twenty patients were not evaluated because they had undergone a second surgical procedure (11 patients) or had died (2) or because they had dementia or another debilitating illness (4), lived too far away (1), or had been lost to follow-up (2). We conducted serial postoperative assessments of parkinsonism in the remaining 20 patients while they were taking medications ("on" period) and after overnight withdrawal of the drugs ("off" period). The mean follow-up time was 52 months (range, 41 to 64).
The combined off-period score for activities of daily living and motor function on the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale was 18.0 percent better at the last evaluation than at base line (95 percent confidence interval, 4.9 to 31.0 percent; P=0.01). Significant improvements were also evident in the off-period scores for contralateral tremor (65.4 percent improvement, P=0.007), rigidity (43.2 percent, P=0.03), and bradykinesia (18.2 percent, P=0.04) and in the on-period score for contralateral dyskinesia (70.6 percent, P<0.001). Changes in medication did not contribute to the sustained improvement. The 20 patients who could not be included in the long-term analysis had similar base-line characteristics but a worse response to surgery at six months.
In the group of patients with advanced Parkinson's disease who could be enrolled in our long-term follow-up study of unilateral posteroventral medial pallidotomy (20 patients from the original cohort of 40), significant early improvements in off-period contralateral signs of parkinsonism were sustained for up to five and a half years. There was a sustained significant improvement in on-period contralateral dyskinesia but not in other on-period signs of parkinsonism.
尽管已有充分文献证明腹后侧苍白球切开术对晚期帕金森病患者的短期益处,但对于该手术的长期疗效却知之甚少。
我们对1993年至1996年间接受单侧腹后侧内侧苍白球切开术的40例患者进行了长期随访研究。20例患者未纳入评估,原因包括接受了二次手术(11例)、死亡(2例)、患有痴呆或其他使人衰弱的疾病(4例)、居住距离过远(1例)或失访(2例)。我们对其余20例患者在服药时(“开”期)和隔夜停药后(“关”期)进行了帕金森病症状的系列术后评估。平均随访时间为52个月(范围41至64个月)。
在末次评估时,统一帕金森病评定量表中日常生活活动和运动功能的“关”期综合评分比基线时改善了18.0%(95%置信区间,4.9%至31.0%;P = 0.01)。“关”期对侧震颤评分(改善65.4%,P = 0.007)、强直评分(43.2%,P = 0.03)和运动迟缓评分(18.2%,P = 0.04)以及“开”期对侧异动症评分(70.6%,P<0.001)也有显著改善。药物调整对持续改善并无作用。未纳入长期分析的20例患者具有相似的基线特征,但在术后6个月时对手术的反应较差。
在能够纳入我们单侧腹后侧内侧苍白球切开术长期随访研究的晚期帕金森病患者组(原40例队列中的20例)中,“关”期对侧帕金森病症状的早期显著改善持续了长达五年半。“开”期对侧异动症有持续显著改善,但“开”期其他帕金森病症状无改善。