Abstract

Approximately 10% of patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder have very disabling chronic forms of the disease, which are resistant to all current conservative therapies. These patients experience a significant deterioration in their quality of life and high rates of suicide. The development of new effective neurosurgical treatments has led to an improvement in a significant percentage of patients that would otherwise have remained severely disabled.We comprehensively review remission rates, adverse effects and fundamental methodological aspects of the current neurosurgical techniques for medication resistant obsessive-compulsive disorder. The making of small lesions in specific targets of the limbic circuit, such as cingulotomy, capsulotomy, limbic leucotomy and subcaudate tractotomy, is being replaced by deep brain stimulation through electrodes located in these targets, which is reversible and adaptable to every patient's need. Furthermore, the development of neuroimaging techniques and a better understanding of brain circuits in the last decades, have allowed the identification of new targets for neurostimulation in this disorder, with good results.Research must continue in order to help in the treatment of medication-resistant obsessive-compulsive disorder.

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