Abstract

Precise localization of the dentatorubrothalamic (DRT) tract can facilitate anatomic targeting in MRI-guided high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) thalamotomy and thalamic deep brain stimulation for tremor. The anatomic segment of DRT fibers adjacent to the ventral intermediate nucleus of the thalamus (VIM), referred to as the rubral wing (RW), may be directly visualized on the fast gray matter acquisition T1 inversion recovery. We compared reproducibility, lesion overlap, and clinical outcomes when reconstructing the DRT tract using a novel anatomically defined RW region of interest, DRT-RW, to an existing tractography method based on the posterior subthalamic area region of interest (DRT-PSA). We reviewed data of 23 patients with either essential tremor (n = 18) or tremor-predominant Parkinson's disease (n = 5) who underwent HIFU thalamotomy, targeting the VIM. DRT tractography, ipsilateral to the lesion, was created based on either DRT-PSA or DRT-RW. Volume sections of each tract were created and dice similarity coefficients were used to measure spatial overlap between the 2 tractographies. Post-HIFU lesion size and location (on postoperative T2 MRI) was correlated with tremor outcomes and side effects for both DRT tractography methods and the RW itself. DRT-PSA passed through the RW and DRT-RW intersected with the ROIs of the DRT-PSA in all 23 cases. A higher percentage of the RW was ablated in patients who achieved tremor control (18.9%, 95% CI 15.1, 22.7) vs those without tremor relief (6.7%, 95% CI% 0, 22.4, P = .017). In patients with tremor control 6 months postoperatively (n = 12), those with side effects (n = 6) had larger percentages of their tracts ablated in comparison with those without side effects in both DRT-PSA (44.8, 95% CI 31.8, 57.8 vs 24.2%, 95% CI 12.4, 36.1, P = .025) and DRT-RW (35.4%, 95% CI 21.5, 49.3 vs 21.7%, 95% CI 12.7, 30.8, P = .030). Tractography of the DRT could be reconstructed by direct anatomic visualization of the RW on fast gray matter acquisition T1 inversion recovery-MRI. Anatomic planning is expected to be quicker, more reproducible, and less operator-dependent.

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