Abstract

BackgroundPatients with functional tremor may be clinically misdiagnosed as “medication-refractory” essential tremor (ET) and referred for surgical treatment. Electrophysiology can screen for functional tremor and avoid inappropriate surgery. ObjectiveTo report the utility of surface electrophysiology (SEMG) to screen for functional tremor in patients referred for ET surgery. MethodsRetrospective review of consecutive ET patients referred to the Mayo Clinic DBS clinic over 1.5 years. Included subjects had a clinical diagnosis of medication-refractory ET and completed presurgical workup including routine SEMG tremor study. ResultsOf 87 subjects, 9 (10%) were clinically suspected of functional tremor by the DBS neurologist. Electrophysiology confirmed functional tremor features in 7/9 and ET in the other 2/9; and newly identified 5 additional cases of functional tremor. There were 12 total confirmed cases of functional tremor: isolated in 1, and mixed functional tremor and ET in 11. Of 11 mixed patients, 6 with mild functional overlay were approved for surgery. The remaining 5 patients with moderate-severe functional overlay and the single patient with isolated functional tremor were referred to the functional tremor motor retraining program. Of these, 1 patient with mixed tremor had residual disabling organic ET after program completion and was later approved for surgery. Thus, 5/87 patients (6%) avoided unnecessary surgery. ConclusionsFunctional tremor may frequently overlay “medication-refractory” ET amongst patients referred for surgery, affecting 1 of 7 patients in our quaternary referral DBS center. Electrophysiology studies are useful to routinely screen patients and prevent unnecessary surgery.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call