Transient Acute Depression Induced by High-Frequency Deep-Brain Stimulation

Boulos‐Paul Bejjani(Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital), Philippe Damier(Inserm), Isabelle Arnulf(Inserm), Lionel Thivard, Muriel Bonnet(Inserm), Didier Dormont(Sorbonne Université), Philippe Cornu(Sorbonne Université), B. Pidoux(Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital), Yves Samson, Yves Agid(Inserm)
New England Journal of Medicine
May 13, 1999
Cited by 653Open Access
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Abstract

Continuous high-frequency stimulation of the basal ganglia was recently introduced for the treatment of patients with advanced Parkinson's disease.1 This treatment seems to be most effective when the electrodes are placed in the subthalamic nuclei.2,3 Among the 20 patients treated successfully by bilateral subthalamic stimulation at our center, 1 woman had transient acute depression when high-frequency stimulation was delivered to the left substantia nigra, 2 mm below the site where stimulation alleviated the signs of Parkinson's disease. We describe here the results of detailed studies of the induction of major, reversible depression in this woman. Case Report A 65-year-old . . .


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