| Literature DB >> 22880117 |
Lara Phillips1, Kaitlyn A Litcofsky, Michael Pelster, Matthew Gelfand, Michael T Ullman, P David Charles.
Abstract
Although deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the basal ganglia improves motor outcomes in Parkinson's disease (PD), its effects on cognition, including language, remain unclear. This study examined the impact of subthalamic nucleus (STN) DBS on two fundamental capacities of language, grammatical and lexical functions. These functions were tested with the production of regular and irregular past-tenses, which contrast aspects of grammatical (regulars) and lexical (irregulars) processing while controlling for multiple potentially confounding factors. Aspects of the motor system were tested by contrasting the naming of manipulated (motor) and non-manipulated (non-motor) objects. Performance was compared between healthy controls and early-stage PD patients treated with either DBS/medications or medications alone. Patients were assessed on and off treatment, with controls following a parallel testing schedule. STN-DBS improved naming of manipulated (motor) but not non-manipulated (non-motor) objects, as compared to both controls and patients with just medications, who did not differ from each other across assessment sessions. In contrast, STN-DBS led to worse performance at regulars (grammar) but not irregulars (lexicon), as compared to the other two subject groups, who again did not differ. The results suggest that STN-DBS negatively impacts language in early PD, but may be specific in depressing aspects of grammatical and not lexical processing. The finding that STN-DBS affects both motor and grammar (but not lexical) functions strengthens the view that both depend on basal ganglia circuitry, although the mechanisms for its differential impact on the two (improved motor, impaired grammar) remain to be elucidated.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22880117 PMCID: PMC3413674 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0042829
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Inclusion and exclusion criteria.
| Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria |
| Parkinson's Disease patients | |
| • Response to dopaminergic therapy | • Evidence of an alternative diagnosis or secondary parkinsonism |
| • Hoehn and Yahr stage II when off medication | • Uncontrolled medical condition or clinically significant medical disease that would increase the risk of developing pre- or post-operative complications (e.g., significant cardiac or pulmonary disease, uncontrolled hypertension) |
| • No contra-indications to surgery | • Dementia |
| • Aged 50–75 years | • Major psychiatric disorder |
| • MRI deemed normal for their age | • Previous brain operation or injury |
| • Have taken levodopa or dopamine agonist therapy for greater than or equal to six months, but less than or equal to four years | • Active participation in another clinical trial for the treatment of PD |
| • Cardiac pacemakers or medical conditions that preclude MRI scans | |
| • Evidence of existing dyskinesias or motor fluctuations | |
| Control subjects | |
| • Aged 50–75 years | • Dementia |
| • Major psychiatric disorder | |
| • Brain operation or injury | |
| • Parkinson's Disease |
Participant demographic and other information.
| Controls | DBS+ODT | ODT | Comparison | |
| Age (years) | 56.9 ( | 61.4 ( | 59.7 ( |
|
| Education (years) | 15.4 ( | 15.8 ( | 14.4 ( |
|
| Handedness | 62.6 ( | 83.1 ( | 49.4 ( |
|
| Time from DBS implantation or baseline to testing (months) | N/A | 13.8 ( | 11.4 ( |
|
| L-dopa equivalent dose (mg) | N/A | 390.7 ( | 645.4 ( |
|
Means are presented, with standard deviations in parentheses. Education reflects years of schooling starting from first grade. Handedness reflects laterality quotients from the Edinburgh Handedness Inventory [47], where 100 represents strongly right-handed and −100 represents strongly left-handed. Comparisons reflect one-way ANOVAs across the three groups (for Age, Education, and Handedness), otherwise an independent-samples t-test between the DBS+ODT and ODT groups.
Past-tense production task: items.
|
| chew, cry, drop, fail, gain, guess, hope, hurl, knock, pull, push, save, slash, smooth, snoop, spray, stop, talk, try, wish, blame, cause, claim, droop, flog, gulp, lurk, pose, pray, sigh, slip, spur, stay, stir, tie, view, vow, watch, weigh, work |
|
| bend, catch, choose, deal, drive, feed, fight, freeze, grow, lend, ride, shake, shoot, slay, steal, stick, sting, string, swear, swing, bleed, blow, breed, build, dig, draw, feel, fling, hide, hold, meet, run, sling, speak, spend, teach, throw, wear, win, write |
Object naming task: items.
|
| accordion, bow, chopsticks, comb, corkscrew, dart, drum, dustpan, eraser, faucet, fork, guitar, hammer, harp, iron, paintbrush, paperclip, pencil, pliers, saw, scissors, screwdriver, shovel, stapler, stethoscope, stopwatch, sword, telescope, toothbrush, umbrella, wallet, wrench, axe, bell, binoculars, broom, calculator, cane, clothespin, flashlight, flyswatter, gavel, hairbrush, ladle, lightbulb, lipstick, mailbox, match, megaphone, microphone, nutcracker, padlock, pen, piano, pitcher, pushpin, racquet, rake, razor, rolling pin, spoon, violin, whisk, whistle |
|
| ant, bat, beaver, chameleon, cheetah, chipmunk, eagle, elephant, flamingo, giraffe, gorilla, hummingbird, kangaroo, koala, lion, monkey, octopus, owl, panda, peacock, penguin, raccoon, scorpion, seahorse, skunk, spider, squirrel, swan, tiger, toucan, wolf, zebra, alligator, antelope, armadillo, bear, bee, bluejay, buffalo, cardinal, cobra, deer, dolphin, fox, frog, gazelle, grasshopper, hippopotamus, jellyfish, leopard, mink, moose, opossum, polar bear, puffin, ram, rhinoceros, seal, shark, starfish, stork, tortoise, turtle, whale |
Item-level covariates included in the statistical models for the Past Tense Production task.
| Variable | Explanation |
| Log of Order | The number of items presented prior to a given item. Including item order in the model allows one to account for variability attributable to presentation order (e.g., due to practice effects within the task). Order is likely to be more influential for earlier items, with order effects diminishing rapidly as participants become more comfortable with the task; therefore, as in previous studies |
| Plosive | A binary variable describing whether the initial sound of the participant's expected response was a plosive. Included because this can affect computer-recorded response time measurements, since plosives tend to be detected faster than fricatives. |
| Fricative | A binary variable describing whether the initial sound of the participant's expected response was a fricative. See above. |
| Last Same | Whether or not the previously presented verb was of the same class (i.e., regular or irregular). Included because repeating a similar response (- |
| Last Real | Whether the previous verb was real or novel. Included because switching from a novel to a real response may affect processing time. |
| Log of Stem Frequency | Natural log of the frequency of the stem (unmarked) form of the verb. This and other frequency variables were based on frequency counts from two text-based corpora |
| Log of PT Frequency | Natural log of the frequency of the correct past tense form of the verb |
| Stem Length | The number of phonemes in the stem, with diphthongs counted as one phoneme. Included because word length can predict performance on single-word processing measures. |
| Phonological Neighborhood | A measure of the frequency of phonologically similar and dissimilar verbs. Included to account for the influence of verbs with similar or dissimilar stem-past phonological transformations (e.g., the processing of |
| Noun-to-Verb ratio | An estimate of the likelihood that a given verb has been converted from a noun or into a noun, computed as the natural logarithm of the ratio of each stem's frequency as a noun to that form's frequency as a verb. |
Figure 1Accuracy for the Past Tense Production task.
Accuracy for the three subject groups in the past tense production task, represented by adjusted means from the regression model. The DBS+ODT and ODT patients were on DBS/ODT during session 1 and off DBS/ODT during session 2. Significance levels are indicated only for session 1 vs. session 2 comparisons that are warranted by two-way interactions between group and session: +: p<.10; *: p≤.05; **: p≤.01; ***: p≤.001; ****: p≤.0001.
Figure 2Response times (RTs) for the Past Tense Production task.
Response times (ln-transformed RTs) for the three subject groups in the past tense production task, represented by adjusted means from the regression model. The DBS+ODT and ODT patients were on DBS/ODT during session 1 and off DBS/ODT during session 2. For significance levels, see Figure 1.
Figure 3Accuracy for the Object Naming task.
Accuracy for the three subject groups in the object naming task, represented by adjusted means from the regression model. The DBS+ODT and ODT patients were on DBS/ODT during session 1 and off DBS/ODT during session 2. For significance levels, see Figure 1.
Figure 4Response times (RTs) for the Object Naming task.
Response times (ln-transformed RTs) for the three subject groups in the object naming task, represented by adjusted means from the regression model. The DBS+ODT and ODT patients were on DBS/ODT during session 1 and off DBS/ODT during session 2. For significance levels, see Figure 1.