4.6 Article

Deep Brain Stimulation Effects in Dystonia: Time Course of Electrophysiological Changes in Early Treatment

Journal

MOVEMENT DISORDERS
Volume 26, Issue 10, Pages 1913-1921

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mds.23731

Keywords

dystonia; deep brain stimulation; plasticity; longitudinal; human; excitability; mechanism

Funding

  1. Dystonia Medical Research Foundation (DMRF)
  2. Action Medical Research
  3. Department of Health's NIHR Biomedical Research Centres
  4. Medtronic
  5. National Institutes of Health [RO1-NS40902 (PI:DC)]
  6. Medical Research Council UK
  7. Brain Research Trust
  8. Medtronic UK
  9. Parkinson's Appeal
  10. Dystonia Society UK
  11. Halley Stewart Trust

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Deep brain stimulation to the internal globus pallidus is an effective treatment for primary dystonia. The optimal clinical effect often occurs only weeks to months after starting stimulation. To better understand the underlying electrophysiological changes in this period, we assessed longitudinally 2 pathophysiological markers of dystonia in patients prior to and in the early treatment period (1, 3, 6 months) after deep brain stimulation surgery. Transcranial magnetic stimulation was used to track changes in short-latency intracortical inhibition, a measure of excitability of GABA(A)-ergic corticocortical connections and long-term potentiation-like synaptic plasticity (as a response to paired associative stimulation). Deep brain stimulation remained on for the duration of the study. Prior to surgery, inhibition was reduced and plasticity increased in patients compared with healthy controls. Following surgery and commencement of deep brain stimulation, short-latency intracortical inhibition increased toward normal levels over the following months with the same monotonic time course as the patients' clinical benefit. In contrast, synaptic plasticity changed rapidly, following a nonmonotonic time course: it was absent early (1 month) after surgery, and then over the following months increased toward levels observed in healthy individuals. We postulate that before surgery preexisting high levels of plasticity form strong memories of dystonic movement patterns. When deep brain stimulation is turned on, it disrupts abnormal basal ganglia signals, resulting in the absent response to paired associative stimulation at 1 month. Clinical benefit is delayed because engrams of abnormal movement persist and take time to normalize. Our observations suggest that plasticity may be a driver of long-term therapeutic effects of deep brain stimulation in dystonia. (C)2011 Movement Disorder Society

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