Pallidal Deep-Brain Stimulation Disrupts Pallidal Beta Oscillations and Coherence with Primary Motor Cortex in Parkinson's Disease.
Doris D WangCoralie de HemptinneSvjetlana MiocinovicJill L OstremNicholas B GalifianakisMarta San LucianoPhilip A StarrPublished in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2018)
In Parkinson's disease (PD), subthalamic nucleus beta band oscillations are decreased by therapeutic deep-brain stimulation (DBS) and this has been proposed as important to the mechanism of therapy. The globus pallidus is a common alternative target for PD with similar motor benefits as subthalamic DBS, but effects of pallidal stimulation in PD are not well studied, and effects of pallidal DBS on cortical function in PD are unknown. Here, in 20 PD and 14 isolated dystonia human patients of both genders undergoing pallidal DBS lead implantation, we recorded local field potentials from the globus pallidus and in a subset of these, recorded simultaneous sensorimotor cortex ECoG potentials. PD patients had elevated resting pallidal low beta band (13-20 Hz) power compared with dystonia patients, whereas dystonia patients had elevated resting pallidal theta band (4-8 Hz) power compared with PD. We show that this results in disease-specific patterns of interaction between the pallidum and motor cortex: PD patients demonstrated relatively elevated phase coherence with the motor cortex in the beta band and this was reduced by therapeutic pallidal DBS. Dystonia patients had greater theta band phase coherence. Our results support the hypothesis that specific motor phenomenology observed in movement disorders are associated with elevated network oscillations in specific frequency bands, and that DBS in movement disorders acts in general by disrupting elevated synchronization between basal ganglia output and motor cortex.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Perturbations in synchronized oscillatory activity in brain networks are increasingly recognized as important features in movement disorders. The globus pallidus is a commonly used target for deep-brain stimulation (DBS) in Parkinson's disease (PD), however, the effects of pallidal DBS on basal ganglia and cortical oscillations are unknown. Using invasive intraoperative recordings in patients with PD and isolated dystonia, we found disease-specific patterns of elevated oscillatory synchronization within the pallidum and in coherence between pallidum and motor cortex. Therapeutic pallidal DBS in PD suppresses these elevated synchronizations, reducing the influence of diseased basal ganglia on cortical physiology. We propose a general mechanism for DBS therapy in movement disorders: functional disconnection of basal ganglia output and motor cortex by coherence suppression.
Keyphrases
- deep brain stimulation
- parkinson disease
- obsessive compulsive disorder
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- ejection fraction
- peritoneal dialysis
- working memory
- prognostic factors
- blood pressure
- heart rate
- endothelial cells
- multiple sclerosis
- brain injury
- stem cells
- transcranial magnetic stimulation
- patient reported
- cell therapy
- mesenchymal stem cells
- functional connectivity
- prefrontal cortex