重度抑郁症和强迫症手术靶点的个性化定义:低强度聚焦超声的潜在作用?

Salvador M. Guinjoan
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引用次数: 1

摘要

严重抑郁障碍(MDD)和强迫症(OCD)是常见的,可能会使人丧失能力。即使得到了认可和充分治疗,超过三分之一的患者对一线药物和心理治疗措施的反应也不令人满意。在采取更果断的措施,包括药物强化(在抑郁症、经颅磁刺激、电休克治疗或氯胺酮或爱斯基摩胺治疗的情况下)后,相当多的人仍然有严重症状。在这些人身上,采用了不同的消融和深部脑刺激(DBS)心理外科技术。然而,除了与手术相关的成本和潜在发病率外,平均只有大约一半的患者表现出足够的反应,这限制了这些可能挽救生命的干预措施的广泛应用。暴露于消融或DBS精神外科手术的不同系列MDD或OCD患者的结果差异很大,可能的原因包括个体间的解剖和病因变异性。低强度聚焦超声(LIFU)是一种新兴的技术,它有望实现大脑深层结构的解剖学限制、无创和可逆的神经调控。讨论了LIFU在个体患者神经调控靶点的个性化术前定义中的可能作用,包括为测试该技术是否有助于改善心理外科结果而提出的临床试验路线图。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Personalized definition of surgical targets in major depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder: A potential role for low-intensity focused ultrasound?

Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) are common and potentially incapacitating conditions. Even when recognized and adequately treated, in over a third of patients with these conditions the response to first-line pharmacological and psychotherapeutic measures is not satisfactory. After more assertive measures including pharmacological augmentation (and in the case of depression, transcranial magnetic stimulation, electroconvulsive therapy, or treatment with ketamine or esketamine), a significant number of individuals remain severely symptomatic. In these persons, different ablation and deep-brain stimulation (DBS) psychosurgical techniques have been employed. However, apart from the cost and potential morbidity associated with surgery, on average only about half of patients show adequate response, which limits the widespread application of these potentially life-saving interventions. Possible reasons are considered for the wide variation in outcomes across different series of patients with MDD or OCD exposed to ablative or DBS psychosurgery, including interindividual anatomical and etiological variability. Low-intensity focused ultrasound (LIFU) is an emerging technique that holds promise in its ability to achieve anatomically circumscribed, noninvasive, and reversible neuromodulation of deep brain structures. A possible role for LIFU in the personalized presurgical definition of neuromodulation targets in the individual patient is discussed, including a proposed roadmap for clinical trials addressed at testing whether this technique can help to improve psychosurgical outcomes.

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