| Literature DB >> 29760182 |
Petra Fischer1,2, Chiung Chu Chen3, Ya-Ju Chang4, Chien-Hung Yeh5,3, Alek Pogosyan5,2, Damian M Herz5,2, Binith Cheeran2, Alexander L Green2, Tipu Z Aziz2, Jonathan Hyam6, Simon Little6, Thomas Foltynie6, Patricia Limousin6, Ludvic Zrinzo6, Harutomo Hasegawa7, Michael Samuel7, Keyoumars Ashkan7, Peter Brown5,2, Huiling Tan1,2.
Abstract
Gait disturbances in Parkinson's disease are commonly refractory to current treatment options and majorly impair patient's quality of life. Auditory cues facilitate gait and prevent motor blocks. We investigated how neural dynamics in the human subthalamic nucleus of Parkinsons's disease patients (14 male, 2 female) vary during stepping and whether rhythmic auditory cues enhance the observed modulation. Oscillations in the beta band were suppressed after ipsilateral heel strikes, when the contralateral foot had to be raised, and reappeared after contralateral heel strikes, when the contralateral foot rested on the floor. The timing of this 20-30 Hz beta modulation was clearly distinct between the left and right subthalamic nucleus, and was alternating within each stepping cycle. This modulation was similar, whether stepping movements were made while sitting, standing, or during gait, confirming the utility of the stepping in place paradigm. During stepping in place, beta modulation increased with auditory cues that assisted patients in timing their steps more regularly. Our results suggest a link between the degree of power modulation within high beta frequency bands and stepping performance. These findings raise the possibility that alternating deep brain stimulation patterns may be superior to constant stimulation for improving parkinsonian gait.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Gait disturbances in Parkinson's disease majorly reduce patients' quality of life and are often refractory to current treatment options. We investigated how neural activity in the subthalamic nucleus of patients who received deep brain stimulation surgery covaries with the stepping cycle. 20-30 Hz beta activity was modulated relative to each step, alternating between the left and right STN. The stepping performance of patients improved when auditory cues were provided, which went along with enhanced beta modulation. This raises the possibility that alternating stimulation patterns may also enhance beta modulation and may be more beneficial for gait control than continuous stimulation, which needs to be tested in future studies.Entities:
Keywords: Parkinson's disease; auditory cueing; beta modulation; freezing of gait; stepping-related STN activity
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29760182 PMCID: PMC5977446 DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3596-17.2018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurosci ISSN: 0270-6474 Impact factor: 6.167
Figure 1.Schematic sequence of stepping in place and visual stimulus. , After each heel strike, the contralateral leg was lifted. The shaded limb depicts the right leg and the unshaded one the left leg. , One example picture from the video that dictated the stepping rhythm.
Clinical details of all patients included
| ID | Age, years/sex/dom hand | UPDRS-III OFF/ON levodopa | Disease duration, years | Main symptom | Levodopa equivalent dose, mg/d | DBS lead |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 62/M/R | 27/4 | 12 | FOG | 955 | Medtronic 3389 |
| 2 | 60/M/R | 52/30 | 8 | FOG | 1282 | Medtronic 3389 |
| 3 | 59/M/R | 53/18 | 7 | Tremor, bradykinesia, dyskinesia | 1195 | Boston Scientific DB-2202 |
| 4 | 64/F/R | 66/36 | 16 | Rigidity, tremor, FOG | 1628 | Boston Scientific DB-2202 |
| 5 | 59/M/R | 36/8 | 14 | Fluctuations, tremor | 1062 | Medtronic 3389 |
| 6 | 56/M/L | 42/26 | 7 | Fluctuations, dyskinesia | 1365 | Medtronic 3389 |
| 7 | 62/M/R | 59/15 | 12 | Tremor, rigidity, dyskinesia, mild FOG | 1000 | Medtronic 3389 |
| 8 | 71/M/R | 36/18 | 15 | Tremor, FOG | 785 | Boston Scientific DB-2201 |
| 9 | 61/M/R | 33/11 | 9 | Rigidity | 1293 | Medtronic 3389 |
| 10 | 57M/R | 49/18 | 12 | Tremor, FOG | 1881 | Boston Scientific DB-2201 |
| 11 | 59/M/R | 28/8 | 10 | Tremor, mild FOG | 1010 | Boston Scientific DB-2201 |
| 12+ | 59/M/R | 23/6 | 22 | Fluctuations, mild FOG | 1658 | Medtronic 3389 |
| 13+ | 65/M/R | 16/8 | 8 | Tremor | 1434 | Medtronic 3389 |
| 14FW | 69/F/R | 49/8 | 20 | Tremor, fluctuations and FOG | 1600 | Medtronic 3389 |
| 15FW | 64/M/R | 44/7 | 12 | Bradykinesia, fluctuations and gait | 2391 | Medtronic 3389 |
| 16FW | 68/M/R | 33/22 | 13 | Bradykinesia, Rigidity and FOG | 1830 | Medtronic 3389 |
*, Recorded in both the soundOff and soundOn conditions during sitting; +, recorded during stepping while standing (soundOff only); FW, recorded during free walking in Taiwan; Dom hand, dominant hand; R, right; L, left; UPDRS-III, Unified Parkinson's disease rating scale part III OFF levodopa/ON levodopa (obtained not at the time of the recording but preoperatively).
Levodopa equivalent dose was calculated according to Tomlinson et al. (2010).
Figure 2., Example of the timings of the heel strikes (triangles) relative to the cues (rectangles) presented in the video of one participant (P5; red, right heel strike; blue, left heel strike). We call the difference between rectangles and the corresponding heel strike step-to-cue difference and the variability of these differences step timing variability. When the sound was off (top row), heel strikes were less rhythmic and less well synchronized with the video than when it was on (bottom row), which was expressed as a larger step timing variability. , Correlation between step timing variability and the FOG-Q scores. Correlations with the behavioral data from the soundOn condition are to the left (n = 9) and correlations with the data from the soundOff condition are to the right (n = 13). The titles show Spearman's ρ with the 95% bootstrapped CIs. The line denotes the robust linear regression fit with 95% CIs.
Figure 3.Beta and gamma step-related power modulation. Beta power was modulated in an opposite manner in the left (n = 13) and right STN (n = 12) during active stepping aligned to the contralateral heel strike (at 0 s; pooled across the soundOn and soundOff condition). The ipsilateral heel strike occurred on average 1 s afterward. The bottom row shows the concurrent leg movements and that shortly after each heel strike the contralateral leg is lifted for the next step. The shaded limb depicts the right leg and the unshaded one the left leg. Encircled clusters denote significant power increases according to the cluster-based permutation procedure in red and decreases in blue relative to the average within the step cycle.
Figure 4.High- and low-beta power modulation. The data are aligned to all right heel strikes (at 0 s), followed by left heel strikes on average 1 s afterward. Black bold lines denote significant differences to 0 and the red filled area shows significant differences between 20 and 30 Hz beta power in the left and right STN after cluster-based multiple-comparison correction (top row; n = 12 patients). The significant differences between the left and right STN appeared when one foot is resting on the floor while the other is up in the air. Shaded areas denote SEM. No significant modulation was present when patients were not moving but were watching the video (right column).
Figure 5.Power modulation during stepping while standing resembles the modulation during sitting. , The increase in beta power after the contralateral step during stepping while standing (right) looks very similar to the modulation while sitting (left; n = 6 STN; compare Fig. 3). , The 20–30 Hz power average (line plot) shows a similar alternating pattern to that in Figure 4. , Beta modulation in both hemispheres and both tasks from one example patient (P11). , The degree of modulation during stepping while standing closely correlates with the degree of modulation while sitting across the six recorded STN.
Figure 6.During straight unrestrained walking, beta power was modulated in an opposite pattern, similar to what was observed during stepping while sitting and standing. , Peaks in the accelerometer (y-axis) were classified as heel strikes. Every other step was chosen in each sequence of consecutive steps, and the uniformity of unilateral heel strike was confirmed by examination of the signal in the x-axis of the accelerometer which captured left-right movement. , Average beta modulation from three patients (n = 6 STN) during walking, which resembles Figure 5A. , 20–30 Hz beta modulation from one example patient when aligned to either even or odd steps.
Figure 7.Beta bursts after contralateral heel strikes (at time = 0 s) were more likely when auditory cues were provided. , Power modulation [max-min(power)] was significantly higher between 28 and 30 Hz during stepping with the metronome compared with stepping without the sound and this difference was mainly driven by an increased beta power peak after the contralateral step (n = 9 patients; t(8) = 3. 05, p = 0.016). , 28–30 Hz beta bursts (defined as exceeding the 75th percentile of the amplitude) were more likely to occur when the sound was on. This probability mirrors the power average to the left. , Correlations between STN power and step interval duration. Fisher's z-transformed Spearman correlations were computed between power and the behavioral variable step interval duration between the ipsilateral step at 0 and the preceding step. Encircled green clusters show that when the interval between the two steps was longer, beta power was higher. The same relationship is shown in the power average below (median split data; green, longest intervals; black, shortest intervals). The x denotes the average time of the 50% of all contralateral heel strikes with the longest intervals in green and the shortest intervals (i.e., occurring closer to the step at 0 s) in black.