| Literature DB >> 28529730 |
Tao Xie1, Mahesh Padmanaban1, Lisa Bloom2, Ellen MacCracken2, Breanna Bertacchi1, Abraham Dachman3, Peter Warnke4.
Abstract
Some studies have shown that low frequency stimulation (LFS, most commonly 60 Hz), compared to high frequency stimulation (HFS, most commonly 130 Hz), has beneficial effects, short-term or even long-term, on improving freezing of gait (FOG) and other axial symptoms, including speech and swallowing function, in Parkinson disease (PD) patients with bilateral subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation (STN DBS). However, other studies failed to confirm this. It seems not clear what determines the difference in response to LFS. Differences in study design, such as presence or absence of FOG, exact LFS used (60 Hz versus 80 Hz), study size, open label versus randomized double blind assessment, retrospective versus prospective evaluation, medication On or Off state, total electric energy delivered maintained or not with the change in frequency, and the location of active contacts could all potentially affect the results. This mini-review goes over the literature with the aforementioned factors in mind, focusing on the effect of LFS versus HFS on FOG and other axial symptoms in PD with bilateral STN DBS, in an effort to extract the essential data to guide our clinical management of axial symptoms and explore the potential underlying mechanisms as well. Overall, LFS of 60 Hz seems to be consistently effective in patients with FOG at the usual HFS in regards to improving FOG, speech, swallowing function and other axial symptoms, though LFS could reduce tremor control in some patients. Whether LFS simply addresses the axial symptoms in the context of HFS or has other beneficial effects requires further studies, along with the mechanism.Entities:
Keywords: Axial symptoms; DBS; Freezing of gait; Low frequency stimulation; Parkinson’s disease; STN; Speech; Swallowing
Year: 2017 PMID: 28529730 PMCID: PMC5437495 DOI: 10.1186/s40035-017-0083-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Neurodegener ISSN: 2047-9158 Impact factor: 8.014
Summary of publications evaluating the effects of LFS of STN on FOG and other axial symptoms
| Ref# | Author, year | Number of patients | Study design | Med On/Off | FOG at HFS | LFS/HFS value | Follow up duration | TEED adjustment | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Moreau et al., 2008 | 13 | Randomized double blinded | Off | Yes | 60 Hz/130 Hz | 8 months | Yes | Acutely, significantly better in all aspects of SWS, including FOG at LFS. F/U: 85% pts. had maintenance of clinical benefit on gait 8 months after on LFS. 10 pts. on ventral, 3 pts. on dorsal contacts. 2 pts. switched back to HFS due to worsening tremor. |
| [ | Brozova et al., 2009 | 12 | Non-randomized non-blinded | On | Yes (7/12 pts) | 60 Hz/HFS (unknown exact Hz for HFS) | 8–12 weeks in 9 pts. (3 pts. unable to stay on LFS due to worsening of tremor, gait, and rigidity) | Not mentioned | F/U: overall, improvements in speech, falling and walking in UPDRS-II and speech and gait in UPDRS-III subscores but worsening of postural stability and gait in 2 pts. |
| [ | Xie et al., 2012 | 2 | Non-randomized non-blinded | Both | Yes | 60 Hz/130 Hz | 10 months | No | Acutely: improvements in UPDRS-III score, FOG and speech at LFS at medication Off and On state. F/U: the beneficial effects lasted for 10 months of the study period. |
| [ | Ramdhani et al., 2015 | 5 | Non-randomized non-blinded | On | Yes (4/5) | 60 Hz/130–185 Hz | 2–6 months | Not mentioned | F/U: at HFS 4/5 had FOG while at LFS only 2/5 pts. had FOG, with reduced severity and axial symptoms, along with amelioration of segmental symptoms and levodopa induced dyskinesia. All pts. had ventral contacts and 3 pts. had simultaneous dorsal contacts. |
| [ | Xie et al., 2015 | 7 | Randomized double blinded | On | Yes | 60 Hz/130 Hz | 6 weeks | No | Acutely: compared with HFS, LFS improved swallowing function, FOG, and axial and overall parkinsonism. The axial score and UPDRS-III score also improved at LFS compared to DBS Off. The axial score was worse at HFS. F/U: benefits persisted over the 6-week study period. 1 pt. switched back to 130 Hz due to worsening tremor. |
| [ | Ricchi et al., 2012 | 11 | Non-randomized | On | No FOG on exam, some had FOG in history | 80 Hz/130 Hz | 1, 5 and 15 months | Yes | Acutely: improvement on SWS test after acutely switching to LFS, with no deterioration of segmental symptoms. F/U: gait improvement no longer detectable by the SWS test 1, 5, and 15 months later. 3 pts. switched back to HFS because of unsatisfactory control of motor symptoms (tremor in 2). 8 pts. maintained at LFS for up to 15 months, with 5 showing a clinical global improvement on the scale. All on dorsal except 1 on ventral contacts. |
| [ | Sidiropoulos et al., 2013 | 45 | Non-randomized non-blinded | On | Not specified, but axial impairment with no satisfactory benefit from HFS | 60–80 Hz/130–185 Hz | 111.5 days, | No | F/U: overall, no improvement with LFS on any of the measures in UPDRS III motor, axial, gait, and speech subscores, and self-reported number of falls. |
| [ | Khoo et al., 2014 | 14 | Randomized | On | No FOG at medication ON assessment, but most had FOG at medication OFF by history. | 60 Hz/130 Hz | No long term follow up | Yes | Acutely: mean UPDRS III score, axial motor subscore and akinesia subscores were improved for LFS. Also, less time and fewer steps to complete the 10-m walk and a tendency of improving the balance. No difference between HFS and LFS in tremor or rigidity. Optimal contacts for LFS were more ventrally distributed. |
| [ | Stegemoller et al., 2013 | 17 | Randomized double blinded | Off | Not specified | 60 Hz/≥130 Hz | No long term follow up | No | Acutely: HFS significantly reduced tremor in tremor dominant (TD) pts., but no acute differences between LFS and HFS on gait, balance, and verbal fluency in both TD and non-TD pts. |
| [ | Vallabhajosula et al., 2015 | 19 | Randomized, blinded and non-blinded portions | Off | Not specified | Phase 1: Off stim, optimal with HFS (≥100 Hz), LFS (60 Hz) without TEED maintained | No long term follow up | No | Acutely: UPDRS-III score, step length and velocity during gait initiation and gait speed improved during LFS and HFS when compared to the DBS Off condition. No significant differences between LFS and HFS conditions. Using LFS at higher voltages showed no improvement over HFS condition. |
| [ | Phibbs et al. 2014 | 20 | Randomized double blinded | Off | Yes (7/19 pts) per history but hard to replicate on exam | 60 Hz/130 Hz | No long term follow up | No | Acutely: no significant difference was found in primary outcome of stride length with the change in frequency or the secondary measures (time on SWS test, data on gait from GaitRite). Improved FOG at LFS in the pt. with FOG at HFS, per description. |
| [ | Moreau et al., 2011 | 11 | Randomized double blinded | Off | Yes | 60 Hz/130 Hz | No long term follow up | Yes | Acutely: improvement in aerodynamic speech parameters during LFS accompanied by significant clinical benefit of more intelligible speech compared to HFS and DBS Off states |
Notes: LFS low frequency stimulation, HFS high frequency stimulation, FOG freezing of gait, Med medications, TEED total electrical energy delivered, SWS stand walk sit test, Pts patients, Ref# reference number, F/U follow up.