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A localized pallidal physiomarker in cervical dystonia
被引:113
|作者:
Neumann, Wolf-Julian
[1
]
Horn, Andreas
[1
]
Ewert, Siobhan
[1
]
Huebl, Julius
[1
]
Bruecke, Christof
[1
]
Slentz, Colleen
[1
]
Schneider, Gerd-Helge
[2
]
Kuehn, Andrea A.
[1
,3
,4
]
机构:
[1] Charite Univ Med Berlin, Movement Disorders & Neuromodulat Unit, Campus Charite Mitte, Dept Neurol, Berlin, Germany
[2] Charite Univ Med Berlin, Dept Neurosurg, Campus Charite Mitte, Berlin, Germany
[3] Charite Univ Med Berlin, Berlin Sch Mind & Brain, Berlin, Germany
[4] Charite Univ Med Berlin, NeuroCure, Berlin, Germany
关键词:
DEEP-BRAIN-STIMULATION;
GLOBUS-PALLIDUS;
OSCILLATORY ACTIVITY;
SUBTHALAMIC NUCLEUS;
PARKINSONS-DISEASE;
FIELD POTENTIALS;
MOTOR IMPAIRMENT;
BASAL GANGLIA;
SYNCHRONIZATION;
CONNECTIVITY;
D O I:
10.1002/ana.25095
中图分类号:
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号:
摘要:
ObjectiveDeep brain stimulation (DBS) allows for direct recordings of neuronal activity from the human basal ganglia. In Parkinson's disease, a disease-specific physiomarker was identified that is now used to investigate adaptive closed-loop stimulation in first studies. In dystonia, such a physiomarker is missing. MethodsPallidal oscillations were recorded from 153 contact pairs in 27 patients. We investigated whether power amplitudes in theta and beta bands correlate with dystonic symptom severity across patients. We then projected theta power from each contact pair onto standard subcortical anatomy. In this way, we defined a theta hot spot on a group level and investigated whether proximity of the active DBS contacts to it correlated with clinical improvement. ResultsDystonic symptom severity significantly correlated with theta but not beta oscillatory amplitudes (=0.4, p=0.009) and interhemispheric coherence (=0.5, p=0.002). The sweet spot of theta activity localized to the posterior third of the internal pallidum and theta power correlated with proximity to this location (=0.23, p=0.002), which coincided with 3 previously published coordinates describing optimal stimulation targets. Finally, motor improvement through pallidal long-term DBS correlated with theta peak amplitude (=0.38, p=0.018). InterpretationOur findings suggest that theta oscillations in the internal pallidum are robustly associated with dystonic symptoms in cervical dystonia and may be a useful biomarker for adaptive closed-loop stimulation. Furthermore, theta oscillatory activity may have a predictive value for the clinical benefit after chronic DBS that could be used to improve intraoperative neurophysiological target mapping during electrode implantation. Ann Neurol 2017;82:912-924
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页码:912 / 924
页数:13
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