Ye Zheng, Heldmann Marcus, Herrmann Lisa, Brüggemann Norbert, Münte Thomas F
Institute of Neuroscience, Center for Excellence in Brain Science and Intelligence Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 200031, China.
Department of Neurology, University of Lübeck, Lübeck 23538, Germany.
Brain Commun. 2022 Apr 13;4(3):fcac096. doi: 10.1093/braincomms/fcac096. eCollection 2022.
Daily activities such as preparing a meal rely on the ability to arrange thoughts and actions in the right order. Patients with Parkinson's disease have difficulties in sequencing tasks. Their deficits in sequential working memory have been associated with basal ganglia dysfunction. Here we demonstrate that altered parietal alpha and theta oscillations correlate with sequential working memory in Parkinson's disease. We included 15 patients with Parkinson's disease (6 women, mean age: 66.0 years), 24 healthy young (14 women, mean age: 24.1 years), and 16 older participants (7 women, mean age: 68.6 years). All participants completed a picture ordering task with scalp electroencephalogram (EEG) recording, where they arranged five pictures in a specific order and memorized them over a delay. When encoding and maintaining picture sequences, patients with Parkinson's disease showed a lower baseline alpha peak frequency with higher alpha power than healthy young and older participants. Patients with a higher baseline alpha power responded more slowly for ordered trials. When manipulating picture sequences, patients with Parkinson's disease showed a lower frequency of maximal power change for random ordered trials than healthy young and older participants. Healthy older participants showed a higher frequency of maximal power change than healthy young participants. Compared with patients with frequency of maximal power change in the alpha band (8-15 Hz), patients with frequency of maximal power change in the theta band (4-7 Hz) showed a higher ordering-related accuracy cost (random ordered) in the main task and tended to respond more slowly and less accurately in an independent working memory test. In conclusion, altered baseline alpha oscillations and task-dependent modulation of alpha and theta oscillations may be neural markers of poor sequential working memory in Parkinson's disease.
诸如准备一顿饭这样的日常活动依赖于将思想和行动按正确顺序进行安排的能力。帕金森病患者在任务排序方面存在困难。他们在序列工作记忆方面的缺陷与基底神经节功能障碍有关。在此,我们证明顶叶α波和θ波振荡的改变与帕金森病的序列工作记忆相关。我们纳入了15名帕金森病患者(6名女性,平均年龄:66.0岁)、24名健康年轻人(14名女性,平均年龄:24.1岁)和16名老年参与者(7名女性,平均年龄:68.6岁)。所有参与者都完成了一项带有头皮脑电图(EEG)记录的图片排序任务,即他们要按特定顺序排列五张图片,并在延迟期间记住它们。在编码和维持图片序列时,帕金森病患者的基线α波峰值频率较低,α波功率高于健康年轻人和老年参与者。基线α波功率较高的患者在有序试验中的反应更慢。在操作图片序列时,帕金森病患者在随机 - 有序试验中最大功率变化的频率低于健康年轻人和老年参与者。健康老年参与者的最大功率变化频率高于健康年轻参与者。与α波段(8 - 15Hz)最大功率变化频率的患者相比,θ波段(4 - 7Hz)最大功率变化频率的患者在主要任务中表现出更高的与排序相关的准确性代价(随机 - 有序),并且在独立的工作记忆测试中往往反应更慢且准确性更低。总之,基线α波振荡的改变以及α波和θ波振荡的任务依赖性调制可能是帕金森病中序列工作记忆不佳的神经标志物。