| Literature DB >> 27717186 |
Anna Castrioto1,2,3, Odeya Marmor4, Marc Deffains4,5, Dafna Willner6, Eduard Linetsky7, Hagai Bergman4,5, Zvi Israel8, Renana Eitan5, David Arkadir7.
Abstract
Classical rate models of basal ganglia circuitry associate discharge rate of the globus pallidus external and internal segments (GPe, GPi respectively) solely with dopaminergic state and predict an inverse ratio between the discharge rates of the two pallidal segments. In contrast, the effects of other rate modulators such as general anesthesia (GA) on this ratio have been ignored. To respond to this need, we recorded the neuronal activity in the GPe and GPi in awake and anesthetized human patients with dystonia (57 and 53 trajectories respectively) and in awake patients with Parkinson's disease (PD, 16 trajectories) undergoing deep brain stimulation procedures. This triad enabled us to dissociate pallidal discharge ratio from general discharge modulation. An automatic offline spike detection and isolation quality system was used to select 1560 highly isolated units for analysis. The mean discharge rate in the GPi of awake PD patients was dramatically higher than in awake dystonia patients although the firing rate in the GPe was similar. Firing rates in dystonic patients under anesthesia were lower in both nuclei. Surprisingly, in all three groups, GPe firing rates were correlated with firing rates in the ipsilateral GPi. Thus, the firing rate ratio of ipsilateral GPi/GPe pairs was similar in awake and anesthetized patients with dystonia and significantly higher in PD. We suggest that pallidal activity is modulated by at least two independent processes: dopaminergic state which changes the GPi/GPe firing rate ratio, and anesthesia which modulates firing rates in both pallidal nuclei without changing the ratio between their firing rates.Entities:
Keywords: Basal ganglia; Parkinson's disease; anesthesia; dystonia; human
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27717186 DOI: 10.1111/ejn.13417
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Neurosci ISSN: 0953-816X Impact factor: 3.386