Title: Functional Neurosurgery and Anesthetic Considerations
1Functional Neurosurgery and Anesthetic
Considerations
- Susan M Ryan, PhD, MD
- Associate Clinical Professor
- Department of Anesthesia, UCSF
- 2006
2What is Functional Neurosurgery?
- Neurosurgery intended to improve
- or restore function by altering underlying
physiology
3Areas of Functional Neurosurgery
- Movement disorders
- Seizures
- Pain syndromes
- Psychiatric disorders
- Peripheral nerve injuries
4Areas of Expansion
- Movement disorders
- Seizures
- Psychiatric disorders
5Neurosurgical Techniques
- Deep brain stimulation (DBS)
- Selective ablation
- electrodes
- Implantation
- viral vectors
- stem cells
- Cranial nerve/ peripheral electrical stimulation
6Functional Neurosurgery
- Began in mid-1900s
- Eclipsed by effective medications
- Now Non-responders
- Advanced cases
7Neurosurgical Techniques
- Deep brain stimulation
- Best established use
- Parkinsons Disease
- Vagal nerve stimulation
- Best established use
- Seizure disorders
8DBS/VNS Studies in Progress
- Obesity
- Fibromyalgia
- Cluster headache
- Tourettes Syndrome
- Depression
- Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
9- DBS for Parkinsons Disease
10Clinical Features
- Pill-rolling tremor
- Masked faces
- Cog-wheel rigidity
- Festinating gate
- Bradykinesia
11Pathologic Features
- Progressive neuronal death
- Dopamine neurons of substantia nigra
- Non- dopamine populations in CNS and PNS
- Bulbar function
- Sympathetic chain
- Parasympathetics of the gut
12Basal Ganglia in PD
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14Treatment
- Medications
- L-dopa periph. inhibitor (Sinamet)
- Dopamine agonists
- MAO inhibitors
- COMT inhibitors
- Amantadine
15DBS Surgery
- Goal Improvement in PD symptoms
- Tremor
- Rigidity
- Hypokinesia
- Gait
- Balance
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17DBS Surgery
- Placement of stereotactic frame prior to
procedure - MRI to confirm coordinates
18DBS Surgery
- Stereotactic head frame attached to bed
- Pt placed in sitting position
19DBS Stereotactic Surgery
- Drill hole in skull to allow electrode placement
for recording stimulation
20DBS Stereotactic Surgery
- Electrode passed slowly to record single cells in
nucleus of interest
21DBS Stereotactic Surgery
- Visual and auditory feedback of cell location and
characteristics
22DBS Stereotactic Surgery
- Listening for cell response during leg movement
23DBS Surgery
- Find best location within the nucleus
- Place stimulating electrode
- Close burr hole, remove frame
- Induce general anesthesia
- Tunnel leads
- Place generator in upper chest wall
- Wait to activate stimulator in outpatient setting
24Anesthesia DBS Generator placement
- General anesthesia for generator placement
- No particular anesthetic
- Propofol or inhaled agent work well
- Avoid dopamine antagonists
- Avoid demerol
- Muscle relaxants OK
- Prevent or treat emergence hypertension
- Not much pain in post-op setting
25PD Specific Issues
- Risk of exacerbation
-
- Consider intraoperative continuation of
medications - Hemodynamics may be labile
- Degeneration of sympathetic ganglia
- Dopamine-related hypotension, hypovolemia
26PD Specific Issues
- Airway or pulmonary compromise
- Upper airway obstruction
- Dysarthria and history of choking
- Restrictive ventilatory pattern
- Aspiration risk
27Patients with Existing DBS
- DBS is usually on 24/7 for PD pts
- May be off at night in other conditions
- Consider turning off prior to surgery
28DBS Surgical Risks
- Intracerebral hemorrhage
- Venous air embolism
- Emotional lability
29DBS Surgical Risks
- Intracerebral hemorrhage
- Monitor patient for neurologic changes
- Risk 1.6 per lead
- Avoid hypertension
- Keep SBP lt 140
- Consider arterial line
- Antihypertensives labetalol, hydralazine
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30DBS Surgical Risks
- Venous air embolism
-
- Early detection
- Communicate with surgeon
- Support blood pressure
- Provide O2
- Airway plan
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31DBS Surgical Risks
- Emotional Lability
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- Usually no treatment needed
- Consider sedation PRN
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32DBS Outcomes
- Bilateral DBS of STN
- N 49
- Assessed at 1,3, and 5 years
- Assessed on and off meds and stimulation
- (Krack, et al, NEJM 349, 2003)
33DBS Outcomes
- Stimulation alone significant improvement
- Synergy between meds and stimulation
- Allows decrease in medication doses
- Improvement in L-dopa dyskinesias
- Akinesia, speech, and freezing of gait all
worsened - (Krack, et al, NEJM 349, 2003)
34DBS vs Medical Therapy
- Randomized-pair trial
- DBS optimized medical tx
- Optimized medical tx
- 75 of pairs favored DBS meds
- Quality of life
- Severity of motor sxs off medication
- (Deuschl et al, NEJM, 355, 2006)
35DBS other motor diseases
- Essential tremor
- Dystonia
- More sedation during MRI
36DBS and Tourettes
- Motor/speech tics
- Up to 1 school age children
- 1/3 persist into adulthood
37DBS for Tourettes(Visser-Vandewalle, J.
Neurosurg 99 2003)
38DBS and Psychiatric Disease
- Depression
- Pilot in 2005
- 4/6 patients improved gt50 on testing
- Currently at least 3 ongoing NIH trials
- 10 to 20 patients per study
39 40Vagus Mixed Sensory and Motor
- 20 efferent parasympathetic control of the
heart and gut viscera - 80 afferent extensive connections to limbic and
higher cortical systems - Animal studies VNS EEG changes and seizure
cessation
41Vagal Nerve Stimulation
- Approved device made by Cyberonics
- Chronic, intermittent stimulation to cervical
vagus - Prevents and aborts seizures
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43Vagal Nerve Stimulation
- Typical settings
- Automatic 30 sec stimulation q 5 min
- Additional manual if pt feels aura, may wave
wand over generator to activate stimulator
44Vagal Nerve Stimulation
- Results from 3 studies
- Significant decrease in seizures 24-35
- Controls low-level stimulation
- Seizure frequency decreased further over time
- Decreased medication doses
45VNS Surgery
- Performed under general anesthesia
- Leads wrapped around L vagus in neck
- Only L, and only unilateral
- Generator placed upper left chest
46Final Electrode/tether Placement
Anchor Tether
Negative Electrode
Positive Electrode
47VNS Surgery
- Possible intraop complications with lead testing
- Arrhythmias- transient sinus arrest
- Labile hemodynamics
- Airway obstruction (vocal cord stimulation)- if
not intubated
48VNS Surgery
- Surgical complications
- Infection 2.9
- Hoarseness or temporary vocal cord paralysis
0.7 - Hypesthesia or lower left facial paralysis 0.7
49VNS Surgery Chronic Side Effects
- Hoarseness
- Cough
- Paresthesias
- Dyspepsia
- Disrupted sleep
- Worsening sleep apnea
50VNS Anesthesia
- Pre-op considerations
- Take usual seizure medications
- CBC, electrolytes
- EKG
- cardiac medications?
51VNS Anesthesia
- May use local, MAC, or GA
- Usually GA- no restriction on agents
- Endotracheal tube
- Blood loss is minimal
52VNS Anesthesia
- Anti-seizure medications induce hepatic enzymes--
higher anesthetic doses? - Post-op seizures are common- be prepared
- Incidence of transient vocal cord paralysis
53 Chronic VNS
- Turn off for other surgery
- Restart in recovery
54VNS for Depression
- Seizure pts with VNS happier over time!
- N 60 pts
- previously failed numerous treatments
- 2 weeks on meds only
- 2 weeks stim adjust meds
- 8 weeks fixed stimu meds
55VNS for Depression
- Open label study
- 30.5 of patients responded with significant
decrease in depression rating scale - 15 full remission
- Substantial functional improvement, even in
non-responders
56VNS for Depression
- Placebo controlled study
- N 225
- VNS-responding patients 15
- Placebo-responding patients 10
- Lower levels of stimulation
- Much to figure out, although now FDA approved
57Other ongoing VNS studies
- Cervical VNS
- PTSD
- Panic disorder
- OCD
- Rapid-cycling bipolar disorder
- Bilateral diaphragmatic VNS
- Morbid obesity
58Functional Neurosurgery
- DBS
- Targets stimulation based on neuroanatomy.
Tailors stim to the disorder. - Invasive.
- Requires neurosurgery
- VNS
- Simultaneous stimulation of multiple tracts
nuclei. - No specific target. Same stimulation for a number
of disorders. - Much less invasive. Does not require
neurosurgeon. - Procedure in search of an application?