RESUMO
OBJECTIVE: Drug-resistant essential tremor (ET) can be treated by Magnetic-Resonance-guided Focused-Ultrasound (MRgFUS) targeted to thalamic ventralis-intermediate nucleus (ViM). We are presenting the results obtained in ET patients by evaluating the cortico-muscular coherence (CMC) and the out-strength among cortical areas. METHODS: We recorded MEG-EMG signals in 16 patients with predominant tremor on the right upper limb. The examination was performed the day before MRgFUS (T0) treatment, 24 hours (T1), and 3-months (T2) after lesioning the left ViM. Normalized CMC (nCMC) and cortico-cortical out-strength among cortical areas were assessed during isometric extension of the right hand. RESULTS: According to the Essential Tremor Rating Assessment Scale, 13 of 16 patients were considered responders. At T1, in the beta-band, nCMC increased in the left hemisphere, namely in the areas directly involved in motor functions. At T2, the nCMC in non-motor areas decreased and the out-strength from other examined cortical areas toward the left motor-area decreased. CONCLUSIONS: In patients positively responding to MRgFUS, the CMC increased in the motor-area of the treated hemisphere immediately after the treatment, while the reorganization of CMC and cortico-cortical out-strength toward the cortical motor area occurred with a delay. SIGNIFICANCE: The effective treatment with MRgFUS corresponds with a readjustment of the CMC and of the communication between cortical areas.