Identification and Management of Persistent Stimulation-Induced Dyskinesia Associated with STN DBS: The See-Saw Dilemma

Congratulations to Matthew A. Remz, Joshua K. Wong, Justin D. Hilliard, Tracy Tholanikunnel, Ashley E. Rawls and Michael S. Okun on the publication of “Identification and Management of Persistent Stimulation-Induced Dyskinesia Associated with STN DBS: The See-Saw Dilemma,” which was published in the August 28th edition of Tremor and Other Hyperkenetic Movements.

Abstract

Clinical vignette: A 73-year-old woman with Parkinson’s disease (PD) underwent implantation of bilateral subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulators (STN-DBS) to address bilateral upper extremity medication-refractory tremor. Post-operatively, she experienced a “see-saw effect” where small increases in stimulation resulted in improvement in one symptom (tremor) with concurrent worsening in another (dyskinesia).

Clinical dilemma: SID is usually considered a positive predictor of DBS outcome. However, there are cases where SID cannot be optimized. Lead location and pre-operative characteristics may contribute to this adverse effect. If the combination of programming and medication adjustments fails to resolve SID, what can be done to “rescue” the outcome?

Clinical solution: Management of SID requires a gradual and steadfast programming approach. Post-operative lead localization can guide advanced programming and decision-making. Rescue surgical interventions may be considered.

Gap in knowledge: In cases where SID is persistent despite deploying persistent optimization strategies, there is limited guidance on next steps.