Surgical Control of Akinesia in Parkinson’s Disease

Abstract
Posteroventral pallidotomy (PVP) was carried out in 86 patients with Parkinson’s disease, who presented marked bradykinesia, freezing of gait and postural defect associated with rigidity and tremor in 82 patients (bradykinesia type), and similar gait and postural problems with minimum signs of rigidity and tremor in 4 (pure akinesia type). The stereotactic coordinates of Leksell’s device were calculated from MRI and conventional ventriculography. The final target was defined by microelectrode techniques in the basal ganglia. The microrecording study revealed a very high background activity in the internal pallidum in patients of the bradykinetic type, however, a much lower pallidal activity in patients of the pure akinesia type. Fifty-eight patients underwent unilateral PVP, and 28 underwent bilateral surgery. Following PVP, rigidity, tremor and poor reciprocal movements were significantly improved especially in the contralateral extremities. The most dramatic findings were the reversal of akinetic symptoms and wearing-off phenomena. The patients were followed up for 3-30 months (mean = 8) after surgery. Of the 82 bradykinesia type patients, good result were obtained in 48 (58%), fair results in 26 (32%), and minor improvement or no change in 8 (10%). In all the 4 patients of the pure akinesia type, recurrence of the akinetic symptoms occurred after a temporal improvement lasting a few days to 3 month after surgery. There was worse dysarthria in 3 patients, hemiparesis in 1 and partial motor aphasia in 1. The visual field problem was not complicated in any patients. These findings suggest that akinetic symptoms in PD are implicated in overactive pallidal outputs with putative GABAergic modulator by excessively inhibiting pedunculopontine nucleus activity (midbrain locomotor and posture regions) as well as thalamic activity. Partial interruption of the pallidal efferents eliminates the akinetic symptoms by disinhibitory effects on the target structures. The pathology of PD of the pure akinesia type is supposedly in the brainstem and should be excluded from indication of pallidotomy.