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Cerebello-striatal interaction mediates effects of subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation in Parkinson's disease

Authors :
Assel Saryyeva
Volker M. Tronnier
Hans-Jochen Heinze
Dirk Rasche
Jürgen Voges
Julia Steinhardt
Alexander Münchau
Lars Büntjen
Arkan Al-Zubaidi
Thomas F. Münte
Elinor Tzvi
Peter Schramm
Alexander Neumann
Marcus Heldmann
Norbert Brüggemann
Imke Galazky
Joachim K. Krauss
Henrike Hanssen
Source :
Parkinsonismrelated disorders. 67
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background In Parkinson's disease (PD), dopamine replacement therapy (DRT) enhances the effective connectivity of the prefrontal cortex (PFC) and supplementary motor area (SMA). The clinical effects of deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the subthalamic nucleus (STN) go beyond DRT effects including highly beneficial tremor suppression. Objectives Here, we aimed to determine DBS-related changes of a motor network using resting state fMRI in PD patients with chronic STN DBS. Methods In a repeated-measurement design, 26 medicated PD patients (60.9 years (SD 8.9)) were investigated using resting state fMRI while bipolar STN stimulation was (i) active or (ii) switched off, and dynamic causal modelling was subsequently performed. Results DBS improved the MDS-UPDRS-III score by 26.4% (DBS ON/Med ON vs. DBS OFF/Med ON). Active stimulation resulted in an increased effective connectivity from cerebellum to putamen (p = 0.00118). In addition, there was a stronger coupling from PFC to cerebellum (p = 0.021), as well as from cerebellum to SMA (p = 0.043) on an uncorrected level. Coupling strength from PFC to cerebellum correlated with the DBS-related change of the resting tremor subscore (r = 0.54, p = 0.031). Self-connections increased as a function of DBS in the right PFC, PMC, SMA, M1, thalamus and left cerebellum. Conclusions DBS-related improvement of Parkinsonian signs appears to be driven by an interaction between the cerebellum and the putamen. Resting tremor suppression may be related to an enhanced prefronto-cerebellar network. Activation of the mesial premotor loop (PFC-SMA) as seen in DRT may thus be secondary due to the primary modulation of cerebellar networks.

Details

ISSN :
18735126
Volume :
67
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Parkinsonismrelated disorders
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....401087654303a47a836a224c77731204