期刊论文详细信息
Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
Subthalamic Nucleus Long-Range Synchronization – an Independent Hallmark of Human Parkinson's disease
Renana eEitan1  Zvi eIsrael1  Fernando Ramirez de Noriega1  Hagai eBergman3  Reuben Ruby Shamir3  Shay eMoshel5  Aeyal eRaz6 
[1] Hadassah University Hospital;Hebrew Univeristy;The Edmond and Lily Safra Center for Brain Sciences;The Interdisciplinary Center for Neural Computation;The Jerusalem mental health center;University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health;
关键词: Subthalamic Nucleus;    synchronization;    oscillations;    Parkinson’s disease;    deep brain stimulation (DBS);   
DOI  :  10.3389/fnsys.2013.00079
来源: DOAJ
【 摘 要 】

Beta-band synchronous oscillations in the dorsolateral region of the subthalamic nucleus (STN) of human patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD) have been frequently reported. However, the correlation between STN oscillations and synchronization has not been thoroughly explored. The simultaneous recordings of 2390 multi-unit pairs recorded by two parallel microelectrodes (separated by fixed distance of 2 mm, n=72 trajectories with two electrode tracks > 4 mm STN span) in 57 PD patients undergoing STN deep brain stimulation surgery were analyzed. Automatic procedures were utilized to divide the STN into dorsolateral oscillatory and ventromedial non-oscillatory regions, and to quantify the intensity of STN oscillations and synchronicity. Finally, the synchronicity of simultaneously vs. non-simultaneously recorded pairs were compared using a shuffling procedure.Synchronization was observed predominately in the beta range and only between multi-unit pairs in the dorsolateral oscillatory region (n=615). In paired recordings between sites in the dorsolateral and ventromedial (n=548) and ventromedial-ventromedial region pairs (n=1227), no synchronization was observed. Oscillation and synchronicity intensity decline along the STN dorsolateral-ventromedial axis suggesting a fuzzy border between the STN regions. Synchronization strength was significantly correlated to the oscillation power, but synchronization was no longer observed following shuffling. We conclude that STN long-range beta oscillatory synchronization is due to increased neuronal coupling in the Parkinsonian brain and does not merely reflect the outcome of oscillations at similar frequency. The neural synchronization in the dorsolateral (probably the motor domain) STN probably augments the pathological changes in firing rate and patterns of subthalamic neurons in PD patients.

【 授权许可】

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