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Article Dans Une Revue American Journal of Neuroradiology Année : 2010

Neuroimaging and deep brain stimulation.

Résumé

Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is a new neurosurgical method principally used for the treatment of Parkinson disease (PD). Many new applications of DBS are under development, including the treatment of intractable psychiatric diseases. Brain imaging is used for the selection of patients for DBS, to localize the target nucleus, to detect complications, and to evaluate the final electrode contact position. In patients with implanted DBS systems, there is a risk of electrode heating when MR imaging is performed. This contraindicates MR imaging unless specific precautions are taken. Involvement of neuroradiologists in DBS procedures is essential to optimize presurgical evaluation, targeting, and postoperative anatomic results. The precision of the neuroradiologic correlation with anatomic data and clinical outcomes in DBS promises to yield significant basic science and clinical advances in the future.

Dates et versions

hal-00805431 , version 1 (27-03-2013)

Identifiants

Citer

Didier Dormont, D. Seidenwurm, Damien Galanaud, P. Cornu, J. Yelnik, et al.. Neuroimaging and deep brain stimulation.. American Journal of Neuroradiology, 2010, 31 (1), pp.15-23. ⟨10.3174/ajnr.A1644⟩. ⟨hal-00805431⟩
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