Kondylis Efstathios D, Randazzo Michael J, Alhourani Ahmad, Lipski Witold J, Wozny Thomas A, Pandya Yash, Ghuman Avniel S, Turner Robert S, Crammond Donald J, Richardson R M
1 Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
1 Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, USA 2 Department of Neurobiology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, USA 3 Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA 4 University of Pittsburgh Brain Institute, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Brain. 2016 Aug;139(Pt 8):2211-23. doi: 10.1093/brain/aww144. Epub 2016 Jun 21.
Recent electrocorticography data have demonstrated excessive coupling of beta-phase to gamma-amplitude in primary motor cortex and that deep brain stimulation facilitates motor improvement by decreasing baseline phase-amplitude coupling. However, both the dynamic modulation of phase-amplitude coupling during movement and the general cortical neurophysiology of other movement disorders, such as essential tremor, are relatively unexplored. To clarify the relationship of these interactions in cortical oscillatory activity to movement and disease state, we recorded local field potentials from hand sensorimotor cortex using subdural electrocorticography during a visually cued, incentivized handgrip task in subjects with Parkinson's disease (n = 11), with essential tremor (n = 9) and without a movement disorder (n = 6). We demonstrate that abnormal coupling of the phase of low frequency oscillations to the amplitude of gamma oscillations is not specific to Parkinson's disease, but also occurs in essential tremor, most prominently for the coupling of alpha to gamma oscillations. Movement kinematics were not significantly different between these groups, allowing us to show for the first time that robust alpha and beta desynchronization is a shared feature of sensorimotor cortical activity in Parkinson's disease and essential tremor, with the greatest high-beta desynchronization occurring in Parkinson's disease and the greatest alpha desynchronization occurring in essential tremor. We also show that the spatial extent of cortical phase-amplitude decoupling during movement is much greater in subjects with Parkinson's disease and essential tremor than in subjects without a movement disorder. These findings suggest that subjects with Parkinson's disease and essential tremor can produce movements that are kinematically similar to those of subjects without a movement disorder by reducing excess sensorimotor cortical phase-amplitude coupling that is characteristic of these diseases.
近期的脑电皮质电图数据表明,初级运动皮层中β相位与γ振幅存在过度耦合,而深部脑刺激通过降低基线相位 - 振幅耦合来促进运动改善。然而,运动过程中相位 - 振幅耦合的动态调制以及其他运动障碍(如特发性震颤)的一般皮质神经生理学相对尚未得到充分研究。为了阐明皮质振荡活动中这些相互作用与运动和疾病状态的关系,我们在视觉提示的、有激励的握力任务期间,使用硬膜下脑电皮质电图记录了帕金森病患者(n = 11)、特发性震颤患者(n = 9)和无运动障碍者(n = 6)手部感觉运动皮层的局部场电位。我们证明,低频振荡相位与γ振荡振幅的异常耦合并非帕金森病所特有,在特发性震颤中也会出现,最显著的是α与γ振荡的耦合。这些组之间的运动运动学没有显著差异,这使我们首次表明,强大的α和β去同步是帕金森病和特发性震颤中感觉运动皮层活动的共同特征,帕金森病中高β去同步最大,特发性震颤中α去同步最大。我们还表明,帕金森病和特发性震颤患者在运动过程中皮质相位 - 振幅解耦的空间范围比无运动障碍者大得多。这些发现表明,帕金森病和特发性震颤患者可以通过减少这些疾病特有的过度感觉运动皮层相位 - 振幅耦合,产生与无运动障碍者运动学上相似的运动。