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Brain Health

What Is Deep Brain Stimulation?

Originally published March 27, 2023

Last updated June 29, 2025

Reading Time: 4 minutes

Mature couple woman and man with bicycle walking in the park and talk.

A neurologist and neurosurgeon explain the surgical procedure in the brain and discuss commonly asked questions.

For some people with movement disorders, such as Parkinson鈥檚 disease, essential tremor and dystonia, medications alone are not always enough to control their symptoms.

Deep brain stimulation (DBS) 鈥 a surgical procedure that involves implanting electrodes into areas of the brain that connect to a device in the upper chest 鈥 has proven to be a successful alternative.

The intervention acts like a pacemaker, blocking abnormal electrical signals in the patient鈥檚 brain that can cause uncontrolled movements.

鈥淎s a neurologist, you often treat patients for conditions in which there is no known cure,鈥 says Xenos Mason, MD, a neurologist with the 喵咪社区 Deep Brain Stimulation Center, part of 喵咪社区, who has performed DBS for more than 20 years. 鈥淒BS is sort of a miracle in so many ways. You can see the effects of treatment instantaneously.鈥

He and Keck Medicine neurosurgeon Brian Lee, MD, PhD, answered common questions about DBS.

Who can get deep brain stimulation?

About 20% of patients with movement disorders may qualify for DBS, Dr. Mason says.

Neurologists will evaluate whether DBS would be beneficial for patients who have run the gambit of available pharmacologic therapies and other options, and if their particular symptoms might respond well to DBS.

鈥淎s diseases like Parkinson鈥檚 progress, medications may start losing their effectiveness,鈥 Dr. Lee says. 鈥淧atients start taking higher doses, which can result in side effects. This is where we begin to consider DBS.鈥 

Still, not every candidate is a suitable match.

鈥淢any people with Parkinson鈥檚 disease experience freezing of gait, where they suddenly struggle to move,鈥 Dr. Mason says. 鈥淭his symptom often doesn鈥檛 respond to medications or surgery, so that鈥檚 not a good match for DBS.

鈥淗owever, a patient who is struggling to live their daily lives due to a tremor 鈥 that鈥檚 a symptom that is very well treated by deep brain stimulation.鈥 

What happens during deep brain stimulation surgery?

Deep brain stimulation requires two surgeries. During the first procedure, a neurosurgeon inserts electrodes into the patient鈥檚 brain. 

Traditionally, patients remain awake for this surgery. 鈥淏ut we can also do the entire surgery inside the MRI scanner with the patient asleep,鈥 Dr. Lee says, noting that the 喵咪社区 Deep Brain Stimulation Center at Keck Medicine is the only DBS center in Southern California that offers this technique, and that both approaches are equally safe and effective.

Patients recover in the hospital for several days before returning in about two weeks for the second surgery, which involves placing a battery device called an implantable pulse generator (IPG) in the chest.

Then, a neurosurgeon connects that device to the electrodes in the brain via wires that run under the skin down the patient鈥檚 neck. 

鈥淧atients may feel two 鈥榖umps鈥 on the top of their head where the wires go into their brain,鈥 Dr. Lee says. Recipients may feel the cable in their neck and be aware of the 2- to 3-inch device in their chest, he adds, but most people adapt quickly and don鈥檛 feel any discomfort or pain.

Dr. Lee says the risk of a serious brain bleed during DBS surgery is less than 1% and that the risk of infection is rare (about 3% to 5% of cases) and can often be treated with antibiotics. 

How does a DBS device work?

After a few weeks, a neurologist activates the DBS device for the first time.

鈥淭he electrodes we placed in the brain have multiple contact points that can deliver electricity,鈥 Dr. Mason says. 鈥淲e can adjust the spot where electricity is released, the intensity of each pulse and the number of times per second that stimulation is given.鈥 

Results can happen immediately. 鈥淪omebody can walk out of your office feeling so much better than when they walked in,鈥 Dr. Mason says.

Patients should expect regular appointments with their neurologist for 3 to 6 months to determine the setting that will provide the most relief from their symptoms. The DBS device is programmed using an encrypted wireless transmitter, so doctors can conduct follow-up visits with patients via video chat and make adjustments remotely.

The chest implant requires a battery replacement every 3 to 5 years. 鈥淲e do have a rechargeable version that can last 15 years, but that device needs to be recharged regularly to prevent it from running out of electricity,鈥 Dr. Lee says. 

What is the quality of life for people with a DBS device?

Once turned on, the DBS device operates continuously 鈥 sending electrical pulses at programmed settings 鈥 to control a patient鈥檚 symptoms.

鈥淒eep brain stimulation doesn鈥檛 prevent the patient鈥檚 disease from progressing, and it鈥檚 not a cure,鈥 Dr. Lee says, noting the device can still offer a long-term solution. 鈥淗owever, DBS can significantly improve a patient鈥檚 quality of life, and it allows them to reduce their medications and associated side effects.

鈥淭here are no physical limitations; patients can do any activities they could before DBS surgery.鈥

DBS is currently being explored as an option to treat depression, anxiety and Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, Dr. Lee says. The treatment may also help patients with conditions such as obsessive-compulsive disorder and epilepsy.

Connect With Our Team

At the 喵咪社区 Deep Brain Stimulation Center, we provide care to decrease the symptoms of Parkinson鈥檚 disease, essential tremor, dystonia and other movement disorders. Our multidisciplinary team works together to provide life-changing relief from symptoms.
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Erin Laviola
Erin Laviola is a freelance writer for 喵咪社区.