| Literature DB >> 28246967 |
M J Gillies1, J A Hyam1,2, A R Weiss1, C A Antoniades3, R Bogacz3, J J Fitzgerald1,3,4, T Z Aziz1,3, M A Whittington5, Alexander L Green6,7,8.
Abstract
The motor symptoms of both Parkinson's disease and focal dystonia arise from dysfunction of the basal ganglia, and are improved by pallidotomy or deep brain stimulation of the Globus Pallidus interna (GPi). However, Parkinson's disease is associated with a greater degree of basal ganglia-dependent learning impairment than dystonia. We attempt to understand this observation in terms of a comparison of the electrophysiology of the output of the basal ganglia between the two conditions. We use the natural experiment offered by Deep Brain Stimulation to compare GPi local field potential responses in subjects with Parkinson's disease compared to subjects with dystonia performing a forced-choice decision-making task with sensory feedback. In dystonic subjects, we found that auditory feedback was associated with the presence of high gamma oscillations nestled on a negative deflection, morphologically similar to sharp wave ripple complexes described in human rhinal cortex. These were not present in Parkinson's disease subjects. The temporal properties of the high gamma burst were modified by incorrect trial performance compared to correct trial performance. Both groups exhibited a robust low frequency response to 'incorrect' trial performance in dominant GPi but not non-dominant GPi at theta frequency. Our results suggest that cellular processes associated with striatum-dependent memory function may be selectively impaired in Parkinson's disease even if dopaminergic drugs are administered, but that error detection mechanisms are preserved.Entities:
Keywords: Cognition; Deep brain stimulation; Dystonia; Globus Pallidus; Parkinson’s disease
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28246967 PMCID: PMC5380693 DOI: 10.1007/s00221-017-4905-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Brain Res ISSN: 0014-4819 Impact factor: 1.972
Participants’ characteristics
| Patient | Diagnosis | Age at surgery | Age at 1st reported symptoms | Handedness | NART IQ | AMIPB (delayed) | SDMT written/oral |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 (m) | Focal dystonia (neck) | 53 | 15 | Right | 100 | 100 (108) | 98/110 |
| 2 (f) | Focal dystonia (L foot) | 21 | 7 | Left | 90 | 94 (100) | 96/99 |
| 3 (f) | Focal dystonia (cervical) | 59 | 35 | Right | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| 4 (m) | Spasmodic torticollis | 65 | 59 | Right | 95 | 98 (84) | 72 (82) |
| 5 (f) | Focal dystonia (cervical) | 66 | 56 | Right | 102 | 114 (117) | 91 (102) |
| 6 (f) | Parkinson’s disease | 66 | 52 | Right | 116 | Passed (15) | na/0.00 |
| 7 (m) | Parkinson’s disease | 44 | 34 | Right | 102 | Passed (11) | −0.06/0.49 |
| 8 (m) | Parkinson’s disease | 55 | 47 | Right | 103 | Passed (9) | n/a |
All scores have a mean 100 and SD 15 unless otherwise stated. Performance is classified as: impaired (<69), borderline (70–79), low average (80–89), average (90–109), high average (110–119), superior (120–129), very superior (>130)
NART IQ National adult reading test intelligence quotient, AMIPB adult memory and information processing battery, SDMT symbol digit modalities test, BFMDRS Burke–Fahn–Marsden Dystonia Rating Scale, TWSTRS Toronto Western Spasmodic Torticollis Rating Scale, UPDRS Unified Parkinson’s disease Rating Scale
Fig. 1Schematic representations of Intra- Extra Dimensional set shift task rules and events within each trial. a Graphic representation of Cantab Intra-extradimensional set shift task rules. See “Materials and methods” for details b Graphic representation of sensory and motor events during an individual trial. The trial begins with presentation of the two visual objects. After a variable decision-making phase, the subject then makes a movement to touch the screen. Screen press elicits auditory and visual feedback indicating whether the subject has chosen the correct or incorrect (‘wrong’) figure for the current rule. After an interval of 1.5 s, the screen becomes blank before the start of the next trial.
Fig. 2Event-related potentials are elicited in GPi during a forced decision-making task requiring motor output. a Coherently averaged normalised ERPs from five dystonic subjects and three Parkinsonian subjects ON medication averaged relative to onset of auditory feedback and grouped according to correct (black line) versus incorrect (red) trial performance, and dominant vs non-dominant GPi response (mean ± SEM). Movement was associated with a slow negative-going potential in dystonic GPi, peaking and subsequently inverting prior to the commencement of auditory feedback (hatched line). Post feedback positive ERP response had significantly greater power in the lower frequency range (<5 Hz) during incorrect trials post feedback cf. correct trials in dystonic subjects in the dominant GPi (P < 0.05, permutation + FDR) but not non-dominant GPi. Parkinson’s disease ON medication dominant GPi ERP during correct and incorrect trials demonstrated a significantly smaller deflection from baseline potential than dystonic subjects and a shorter positive phase post feedback (P < 0.05, permutation + FDR). No significant differences were observed in non-dominant GPi responses in dystonic or Parkinson’s disease ON medication subjects. Post feedback ERP in Parkinson’s disease subjects ON medication exhibited significantly greater power in the theta band (3–8 Hz) during incorrect trials cf. correct trials in dominant GPi but not non-dominant GPi. Post feedback ERP in dystonic subjects demonstrated significantly greater power in the low theta range (<5 Hz) in incorrect trials cf. correct trials [P < 0.05, permutation + FDR]. b Averaged Event-related Spectral Perturbance (ERSP) was analysed to further define the response to feedback. Receipt of task feedback (correct vs incorrect via tone and on-screen information) was accompanied by a transient burst of high gamma oscillations (100–150 Hz) in dystonic subjects in both correct and incorrect trials in both dominant and non-dominant GPi. Parkinson’s disease subjects did not demonstrate this response. Post feedback gamma (30–100 Hz) and beta (15–30 Hz) oscillations had significantly greater power in Parkinson’s disease subjects ON medication compared to dystonic subjects, but were not significantly different in either group between correct and incorrect trials. Scale bar 0.5 standard deviations (mean 0.0), 1.5 s
Fig. 3High gamma signal contains trial performance information in dystonics only. a Example smoothed ERP from a single patient [patient 2, therefore, dominant side is right GPi]. Onset of auditory feedback is associated with a transient negative deflection nesting a burst of high gamma activity (peak frequency 132 Hz). b ERSPs −100 ms prior to start of auditory feedback to +500 ms indicate time to peak high gamma power is longer post start of feedback in incorrect trials cf. correct trials (time to peak correct trials + 20 ms, incorrect trials + 70 ms, P < 0.05 permutation stats + FDR) in both dominant and non-dominant GPi. (n = 5 subjects, 330 correct trials, 108 incorrect trials). c There were no significant differences in high gamma band power between correct and incorrect trials, or between high gamma band power recorded in dominant vs non dominant GPi (not shown)
Fig. 4Comparison of ERPs between on medication and off medication conditions in two Parkinson’s disease subjects. Analysis of a ERPs and b ERSPs in two patients ON and OFF dopaminergic medications (meds), on medication n = 118 correct trials, 23 incorrect trials, off medication n = 139 correct trials, 40 incorrect trials. Incorrect trials were associated with significantly increased power in the theta band (3–8 Hz) post feedback compared to correct trials both on and off medication. The theta frequency activity persisted longer off medications than on medications. High gamma bursts were not observed in Parkinson’s disease subjects on or off medication in dominant or non-dominant GPi