Abstract

Parkinson's disease is a progressive disabling movement disorder that is characterised by three cardinal symptoms: resting tremor, rigidity, and bradykinesia. Before the availability of effective medical treatment with levodopa and stereotactic neurosurgery, the objective of surgical management was to alleviate symptoms such as tremor at the expense of motor deficits. Levodopa was the first effective medical treatment for Parkinson's disease, and surgical treatment such as stereotactic thalamotomy became obsolete. After one decade of levodopa therapy, however, drug-induced dyskinesia had become a source of additional disability not amenable to medical treatment. Renewed interest in stereotactic functional neurosurgery to manage Parkinson's disease has been seen since the 1980s. Local experience of deep-brain stimulation is presented and discussed in this paper. Deep-brain stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus is an effective treatment for advanced Parkinson's disease, although evidence from randomised control trials is lacking.

Details

Title
Surgical management of Parkinson's disease: a critical review
Author
Chan, DTM; Mok, VCT; Poon, W S; Hung, K N; Zhu, X L
First page
34
Publication year
2001
Publication date
Mar 2001
Publisher
Hong Kong Academy of Medicine
ISSN
10242708
e-ISSN
22268707
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English; Chinese
ProQuest document ID
2787672595
Copyright
© 2001. Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the associated terms available at https://www.hkmj.org/about/website.html