Brain Sciences (Nov 2022)

STN-DBS Induces Acute Changes in β-Band Cortical Functional Connectivity in Patients with Parkinson’s Disease

  • Matteo Conti,
  • Alessandro Stefani,
  • Roberta Bovenzi,
  • Rocco Cerroni,
  • Elena Garasto,
  • Fabio Placidi,
  • Claudio Liguori,
  • Tommaso Schirinzi,
  • Nicola B. Mercuri,
  • Mariangela Pierantozzi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12121606
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 12
p. 1606

Abstract

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Subthalamic nucleus deep-brain stimulation (STN-DBS), in addition to a rapid improvement of Parkinson’s disease (PD) motor symptoms, can exert fast, local, neuromodulator activity, reducing β-synchronous oscillations between STN and the motor cortex with possible antikinetic features. However, STN-DBS modulation of β-band synchronization in extramotor cortical areas has been scarcely explored. For this aim, we investigated DBS-induced short-term effects on EEG-based cortical functional connectivity (FC) in β bands in six PD patients who underwent STN-DBS within the past year. A 10 min, 64-channel EEG recording was performed twice: in DBS-OFF and 60 min after DBS activation. Seven age-matched controls performed EEG recordings as the control group. A source-reconstruction method was used to identify brain-region activity. The FC was calculated using a weighted phase-lag index in β bands. Group comparisons were made using the Wilcoxon test. The PD patients showed a widespread cortical hyperconnectivity in β bands in both DBS-OFF and -ON states compared to the controls. Moreover, switching on STN-DBS determined an acute reduction in β FC, primarily involving corticocortical links of frontal, sensorimotor and limbic lobes. We hypothesize that an increase in β-band connectivity in PD is a widespread cortical phenomenon and that STN-DBS could quickly reduce it in the cortical regions primarily involved in basal ganglia–cortical circuits.

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