Abstract

Cerebral palsy (CP) is a heterogeneous group of non-progressive syndromes with lots of clinical variations due to the extent of brain damages and etiologies. CP is majorly defined by dystonia and spasticity. The treatment of acquired dystonia in CP is very difficult. Many pharmacological treatments have been tried and surgical treatment consists of deep brain stimulation (continuous electrical neuromodulation) of internal globus pallidus (GPi). A peculiar cause of CP is neonatal encephalopathy due to an anoxic event in the perinatal period. Many studies showed an improvement of dystonia in CP patients with bilateral GPi DBS. However, it remains a variability in the range of 1% to 50%. Published case-series concerned mainly small population with a majority of adult patients. Selection of patients according to the clinical pattern, to the brain lesions observed on classical imaging and to DTI is the key of a high success rate of DBS in children with perinatal hypoxemic encephalopathy. Only a large retrospective study with a high number of patients in a homogeneous pediatric population with a long-term follow-up or a prospective multicenter trial investigation could answer with a high degree of certitude of the real interest of this therapeutic in children with hypoxemic perinatal encephalopathy.

Highlights

  • Cerebral palsy (CP) is a heterogeneous group of non-progressive syndromes with lots of clinical variations due to the extent of brain damages and etiologies

  • CP is majorly defined by dystonia and spasticity

  • Surgical treatment consisting of deep brain stimulation of internal globus pallidus (GPi) have shown divergent results

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Summary

Introduction

Cerebral palsy (CP) is a heterogeneous group of non-progressive syndromes with lots of clinical variations due to the extent of brain damages and etiologies. 2007, that, despite 150 years of debate, there was not a universally accepted definition of CP [3] Movement disorders in this pediatric population have a severe impact on the growing of the musculoskeletal system leading to irreversible skeletal deformations [4]. Surgical treatment consisting of deep brain stimulation (continuous electrical neuromodulation) of internal globus pallidus (GPi) have shown divergent results. No correlation has been demonstrated between the degree of lesions on MRI, the severity of the motor symptoms and the success rate of DBS. Since 1996, we demonstrated efficacy and safety of this surgical treatment, initially for patients with “primary” dystono-dyskinetic syndromes in children and in adults [5]. The efficacy of GPi DBS has been demonstrated in selected cases of hypoxic neonatal encephalopathy, the precise mechanisms of action remain unclear

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