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Deep brain stimulation for tremor shows consistent improvement across different targeting methods

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Deep brain stimulation for tremor shows consistent improvement across different targeting methods
Photo by Greg Rosenke / Unsplash

Researchers reviewed existing studies on a surgical treatment for severe tremor, called deep brain stimulation (DBS). This procedure targets a small area in the brain called the Vim nucleus. The review included data from 211 patients who had this surgery.

The analysis found that across all the studies, the surgery consistently led to substantial improvement in tremor. This was true whether surgeons used traditional anatomical maps, electrical recordings during surgery, or advanced MRI scans to guide them. The tremor reduction was statistically significant.

It's important to understand this was a review of existing studies, not a new clinical trial. The original studies varied considerably in their designs, the patients included, and the specific techniques used. This makes direct comparisons between different targeting methods difficult.

Readers should know this review confirms that Vim-targeted DBS surgery can help reduce tremor, but it doesn't tell us if newer, imaging-based targeting methods are better than older approaches. More standardized research is needed to answer that question.

What this means for you:
Deep brain stimulation surgery helps reduce tremor, but more research is needed to compare different surgical targeting methods.
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