Abstract

ObjectiveFocused ultrasound thalamotomy is an emerging treatment for essential tremor, and it is ideal for studying reorganization in the human brain after acute injury because it creates a controlled thalamic ablation without breaching the cortex. However, there is not yet a metric capable of detecting microstructural changes in the presence of acute phase edema with good sensitivity in the chronic phase, when the lesion boundaries become inconspicuous.MethodsWe prospectively studied microstructural changes at the lesion site using generalized q-sampling imaging with restricted diffusion imaging. We obtained diffusion-weighted MRI scans preoperatively, 1 day after (n = 18), and 1 year after (n = 9) focused ultrasound thalamotomy. The restricted diffusion imaging maps were compared at the group level, controlling for improvement in contralateral hand tremor.ResultsThe restricted diffusion imaging metric significantly increased in the 1 day post images, and the area with restricted diffusivity extended beyond the lesion boundaries identified on T2-weighted imaging. Two distinct zones of microstructural changes were identified, and the lesion area was identifiable at 1 year. The anterior and medial aspects of the lesion had a significant changes in RDI at 1 year, potentially signifying reorganization. The voxels with significant changes in restricted diffusion imaging values extend beyond the VIM into the surrounding white matter.InterpretationCorrecting for free water contamination with restricted diffusion imaging allowed us to study microstructural changes after focused ultrasound thalamotomy. We observed statistically significant changes in RDI in the anterior and medial aspect of the lesion at 1 year. Whether these changes represent tissue reorganization remains to be confirmed in future studies. These findings may support performing additional ablations antero-medially for durable efficacy.

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