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Essential Tremor: Approaches to Treatment Part 6 of 7 www.wemove.org Essential Tremor Slide Library Version 1.0 - All Contents Copyright © WE MOVE 2001 ET: Therapeutic Options • No treatment • Physical/psychological measures/lifestyle changes • Pharmacologic approaches • Surgical management www.wemove.org Rationale for No Treatment • Side effects may be more severe than symptoms or disability from tremor • No agents are known to effect the rate of disease progression • Disability may be minimal in some patients www.wemove.org Physical and Psychological Measures/Lifestyle Changes • Application of weights to affected limbs with decreases in tremor amplitude proportional to the weight applied • Biofeedback and relaxation techniques www.wemove.org Drug Therapy for Essential Tremor • Reasonable option for any patient with disabling tremor • Pharmacologic therapy may produce a significant reduction in tremor www.wemove.org Pharmacologic Approaches • Beta-blockers such as propranolol (Inderal®) • Primidone (Mysoline®) • Combination Primidone/propranolol therapy • Calcium channel blockers • Carbonic anhydrase inhibitors • Botulinum toxin type A (BOTOX®) • Other medications www.wemove.org Beta-blockers Propranolol (Inderal®) is the most studied beta-blocker for ET – Response is highly variable and the tremor is rarely totally suppressed – Approximately 50% to 70% of patients obtain some symptomatic relief – Amplitude may be decreased but frequency typically remains constant www.wemove.org Other Beta-blockers • • • • • Available and studied for ET... Metoprolol (Lopressor®) Timolol (Timoptic®) Atenolol (Tenormin®) Nadolol (Corgard®) www.wemove.org Propranolol www.wemove.org Primidone ® (Mysoline ) • Demonstrated efficacy in placebo-controlled trials with reported 66% reduction in tremor severity • Initiation of therapy with low dose. Mysoline suspension may be useful (250mg/5ml) • Slow upward titration • Dosage of 250 mg/day appears to be an effective dose • Maximum dosage is 750 mg/day in three divided doses www.wemove.org Primidone (cont.) • Primidone as effective or slightly more effective than propranolol (Koller, 1986; Wastelewski et al., 1998) • Long duration of benefit from a single dose • Occasional acute, transient idiosyncratic toxic response • Long-term therapy generally well tolerated www.wemove.org Primidone (cont.) • Experiment with a single evening dose equal to total daily dose • CBC before drug initiation • Recheck CBC every 6 to 12 months for rare hematologic dyscrasias • Some patients become tolerant to the effects, perhaps with disease progression www.wemove.org Response to Primidone • Some patients have a shorter clinical response to primidone • More frequent dosing may be required (Koller W. Neurology 1986;36:121-124) www.wemove.org Primidone (cont.) Primidone has been shown in several placebo-controlled trials to be... • Effective for essential tremor • Resulting in a reported 66% reduction of tremor www.wemove.org Primidone: Adverse Effects • Adverse effects with chronic therapy minimal in most patients. Propranolol often less well tolerated • Up to 20% or fewer experience an acute toxic reaction • Acute reactions are more common with larger initial doses www.wemove.org Primidone: Adverse Effects (cont.) • Recovery from acute reaction is invariable • Ongoing therapy after reaction generally tolerated • Patients advised about the risk of acute reactions are more likely to continue therapy • Slow upward titration of primidone or use of primidone in suspension may reduce the risk of acute reactions www.wemove.org Combination Therapy Primidone and propranolol may be used in combination • Primidone initiated at 12.5 mg to 25 mg at bedtime • Propranolol added, usually at 40 mg tid • Long-acting formulation of propranolol may be substituted if once-daily administration is desired www.wemove.org Other Pharmacologic Approaches • Calcium channel blockers: nimodipine (Nimotop®) and nicardipine (Cardene®) • Carbonic anhydrase inhibitors: acetazolamide (Diamox®) and methazolamide (Neptazane®) • Benzodiazepines: clonazepam (Klonopin®), diazepam (Valium®) and alprazolam (Xanax®) www.wemove.org Efficacy of Medications in Essential Tremor Patients* * Values express percentage of patients reporting greater than 50% tremor reduction. www.wemove.org † Not applicable as these data were not collected. Other Miscellaneous Pharmacologic Agents • • • • • • Theophylline Isoniazid (Nydrazid®): ineffective Clonidine (Catapres®): ineffective Gabapentin (Neurontin®): ineffective Topiramate: under investigation Clozapine (Clozaril®): effective in open-label studies www.wemove.org Botulinum Toxin Type A (BOTOX®) • Hand tremor: Reduced tremor amplitude by 30%. No improvement in functional ratings. Finger weakness usually unacceptable to the patient. • Head tremor: BTX-A produced clear improvement in clinical rating scales and subjective patient ratings. Minimal side effects. www.wemove.org Summary: Drug Therapy for ET • Primidone as initial therapy for patients with disabling tremor • Nonselective beta-blocker added to primidone therapy in patients with residual tremor or substituted for primidone in nonresponders • Botulinum toxin type A (BOTOX®) injections considered for patients with medication-refractory head tremor • BTX-A occasionally considered for patients with severe hand tremor www.wemove.org Surgical Management of ET Procedures with proven efficacy: • Stereotactic thalamotomy • Chronic thalamic stimulation (DBS) Pahwa R, Koller W. Surgical treatment of essential tremor. In: Bain P, Brin M, Deuschl G, Elble R, Findley L, Jankovic J, Koller W, Pahwah R. Current issues in essential tremor. A continuing medical education monograph. Embryon 1999;27. www.wemove.org Thalamotomy for ET • For severe unilateral or asymmetric tremor • Stereotactic lesioning of the ventralis intermedius (VIM) nucleus • Efficacy: approximately 78% to 100% of patients show contralateral improvement and tremor remission • Long-term relief with benefits continuing in most patients www.wemove.org Thalamotomy for ET (cont.) • Bilateral thalamotomies usually not performed due to high risk of permanent dysarthria • ~70% of patients with voice tremor improve with unilateral thalamotomy • Incomplete lesioning may lead to reemergent tremor within two months www.wemove.org Thalamotomies in ET www.wemove.org Thalamotomy: Adverse Effects Risk of major operative complications less than 2% • Surgical morbidity is rare but can be catastrophic • Uncommon but usually transient occurrence of cerebral hemorrhage, seizure, cerebellar signs, hemiparesis, cognitive deficits • Dysarthria may be severe in bilateral thalamotomies www.wemove.org Thalamic Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) • Approved for use in patients with ET in 1998 • No lesioning as in thalamotomy • Wire electrode placed in the target area (VIM) www.wemove.org Thalamic DBS (cont.) • Connecting wire tunneled under the scalp to subclavicular region • Wire connected to surgically placed implantable pulse generator (IPG) • Continuous electrical stimulation delivered to the target area • Hand-held magnet turns stimulator on or off www.wemove.org Thalamic DBS (cont.) • Programming of the pulse generator includes setting… – – – – Optimal electrode montage Pulse width Voltage Stimulation frequency • Contralateral arm tremor reduced by ~80% www.wemove.org Pathways Relevant to the Pathophysiology of Tremor Vidailhet M, Jedynak C, Pollak P, Agid Y. Pathology of symptomatic tremors. Mov Disord 1998;13(suppl 3):49-54. www.wemove.org High Frequency Thalamic Stimulation for ET www.wemove.org Thalamic DBS: Side Effects • Double-blind study comparing DBS and thalamotomy showed them equally effective but fewer side effects with DBS • Bleeding may occur • Limb parasthesias most common side effect • Hardware failure and infections www.wemove.org Thalamic DBS: Advantages • Reversibility • Adaptability • Potential ability to perform bilateral operations for hand tremor with reduced risk of morbidity • Late tremor recurrence addressed by adjustments of pulse generator programming parameters Pahwa Rajesh, Koller William C. Surgical treatment of essential tremor. In: Bain Peter, Brin Mitchell, Deuschl Günther, Elble Rodger, Findley Leslie, Jankovic Joseph, Koller William, Pahwah Rajesh. Current issues in essential tremor. Embryon 1999;30. www.wemove.org Thalamic DBS: Disadvantages • • • • Increased expense Implantation of foreign material Need to replace batteries/hardware Effort and time to optimize stimulation parameters www.wemove.org Patient Selection for Surgery Possible candidates for stereotactic procedures include ET patients with disabling medication-resistant tremor Contraindicated in those with... • Marked cognitive problems • Unstable medical diagnosis that may significantly increase surgical risk www.wemove.org ET Treatment Summary • Therapy plan guided by measures of disability, handicap, and quality of life • When disability exists, drug treatment should be attempted, unless contraindicated • Nonresponders to oral medications may respond to botulinum toxin type A injections • Surgical options may be appropriate for severe tremor refractory to conservative management www.wemove.org