Clinico-physiological correlates of Parkinson’s disease from multi-resolution basal ganglia recordings

  • Srdjan Sumarac
  • , Jinyoung Youn
  • , Conor Fearon
  • , Luka Zivkovic
  • , Prerana Keerthi
  • , Oliver Flouty
  • , Milos Popovic
  • , Mojgan Hodaie
  • , Suneil Kalia
  • , Andres Lozano
  • , William Hutchison
  • , Alfonso Fasano
  • , Luka Milosevic

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Parkinson’s disease (PD) has been associated with pathological neural activity within the basal ganglia. Herein, we analyzed resting-state single-neuron and local field potential (LFP) activities from people with PD who underwent awake deep brain stimulation surgery of the subthalamic nucleus (STN; n = 125) or globus pallidus internus (GPi; n = 44), and correlated rate-based and oscillatory features with UPDRSIII off-medication subscores. Rate-based single-neuron features did not correlate with PD symptoms. STN single-neuron and LFP low-beta (12–21 Hz) power and burst dynamics showed modest correlations with bradykinesia and rigidity severity, while STN spiketrain theta (4–8 Hz) power correlated modestly with tremor severity. GPi low- and high-beta (21–30 Hz) power and burst dynamics correlated moderately with bradykinesia and axial symptom severity. These findings suggest that elevated single-neuron and LFP oscillations may be linked to symptoms, though modest correlations imply that the pathophysiology of PD may extend beyond resting-state beta oscillations.

Original languageEnglish
Article number175
Journalnpj Parkinson's Disease
Volume10
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2024
Externally publishedYes

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