Department of Neurology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Department of Neurology, Weill Institute for Neurosciences, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
J Parkinsons Dis. 2020;10(3):903-910. doi: 10.3233/JPD-202072.
Most medical centers are postponing elective procedures and deferring non-urgent clinic visits to conserve hospital resources and prevent spread of COVID-19. The pandemic crisis presents some unique challenges for patients currently being treated with deep brain stimulation (DBS). Movement disorder (Parkinson's disease, essential tremor, dystonia), neuropsychiatric disorder (obsessive compulsive disorder, Tourette syndrome, depression), and epilepsy patients can develop varying degrees of symptom worsening from interruption of therapy due to neurostimulator battery reaching end of life, device malfunction or infection. Urgent intervention to maintain or restore stimulation may be required for patients with Parkinson's disease who can develop a rare but potentially life-threatening complication known as DBS-withdrawal syndrome. Similarly, patients with generalized dystonia can develop status dystonicus, patients with obsessive compulsive disorder can become suicidal, and epilepsy patients can experience potentially life-threatening worsening of seizures as a result of therapy cessation. DBS system infection can require urgent, and rarely emergent surgery. Elective interventions including new implantations and initial programming should be postponed. For patients with existing DBS systems, the battery status and electrical integrity interrogation can now be performed using patient programmers, and employed through telemedicine visits or by phone consultations. The decision for replacement of the implantable pulse generator to prevent interruption of DBS therapy should be made on a case-by-case basis taking into consideration battery status and a patient's tolerance to potential therapy disruption. Scheduling of the procedures, however, depends heavily on the hospital system regulations and on triage procedures with respect to safety and resource utilization during the health crisis.
大多数医疗中心都在推迟选择性手术,并推迟非紧急门诊就诊,以节约医院资源并防止 COVID-19 的传播。大流行危机给目前正在接受深部脑刺激(DBS)治疗的患者带来了一些独特的挑战。运动障碍(帕金森病、原发性震颤、肌张力障碍)、神经精神障碍(强迫症、妥瑞氏综合征、抑郁症)和癫痫患者由于神经刺激器电池寿命结束、设备故障或感染而中断治疗,可能会出现不同程度的症状恶化。对于帕金森病患者,可能会出现一种罕见但可能危及生命的并发症,称为 DBS 撤药综合征,因此可能需要紧急干预以维持或恢复刺激。同样,全身性肌张力障碍患者可能会出现张力障碍状态,强迫症患者可能会自杀,癫痫患者可能会因停止治疗而出现潜在危及生命的癫痫发作恶化。DBS 系统感染可能需要紧急手术,甚至是急诊手术。应推迟选择性干预,包括新植入和初始编程。对于有现有 DBS 系统的患者,现在可以使用患者编程器进行电池状态和电完整性检查,并通过远程医疗访问或电话咨询进行。是否更换可植入脉冲发生器以防止 DBS 治疗中断的决定应根据具体情况做出,同时考虑电池状态和患者对潜在治疗中断的耐受性。然而,手术的安排在很大程度上取决于医院系统的规定以及在医疗危机期间有关安全和资源利用的分诊程序。