| Literature DB >> 34453827 |
Leon Sobesky1, Lukas Goede1, Vincent J J Odekerken2, Qiang Wang1, Ningfei Li1, Clemens Neudorfer1, Nanditha Rajamani1, Bassam Al-Fatly1, Martin Reich3, Jens Volkmann3, Rob M A de Bie2, Andrea A Kühn1, Andreas Horn1,4,5.
Abstract
The subthalamic nucleus and internal pallidum are main target sites for deep brain stimulation in Parkinson's disease. Multiple trials that investigated subthalamic versus pallidal stimulation were unable to settle on a definitive optimal target between the two. One reason could be that the effect is mediated via a common functional network. To test this hypothesis, we calculated connectivity profiles seeding from deep brain stimulation electrodes in 94 patients that underwent subthalamic and 28 patients with pallidal treatment based on a normative connectome atlas calculated from 1000 healthy subjects. In each cohort, we calculated connectivity profiles that were associated with optimal clinical improvements. The two maps showed striking similarity and were able to cross-predict outcomes in the respective other cohort (R = 0.37 at P < 0.001; R = 0.34 at P = 0.032). Next, we calculated an agreement map, which retained regions common to both target sites. Crucially, this map was able to explain an additional amount of variance in clinical improvements of either cohort when compared to the maps calculated on each cohort alone. Finally, we tested profiles and predictive utility of connectivity maps calculated from different motor symptom subscores with a specific focus on bradykinesia and rigidity. While our study is based on retrospective data and indirect connectivity metrics, it may deliver empirical data to support the hypothesis of a largely overlapping network associated with effective deep brain stimulation in Parkinson's disease irrespective of the specific target.Entities:
Keywords: Parkinson’s disease; connectivity; deep brain stimulation; internal globus pallidus/GPi; subthalamic nucleus/STN
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34453827 DOI: 10.1093/brain/awab258
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain ISSN: 0006-8950 Impact factor: 13.501