4.6 Article

A Single Case Feasibility Study of Sensorimotor Rhythm Neurofeedback in Parkinson's Disease

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 15, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2021.623317

Keywords

Parkinson’ s disease; neurofeedback; sensorimotor rhythm; electroencephalography; beta burst

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Funding

  1. Anonymous Life Science Fund (GHGCP)
  2. Laurie C McGrath Research Fund (GHGCL)

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Electroencephalographic activity over the sensorimotor cortex has been extensively studied for neurofeedback therapy, with Parkinson's disease patients exhibiting abnormal brain rhythms. A pilot study involving one patient with PD demonstrated the feasibility of sensorimotor neurofeedback training in reducing PD-related activity and increasing SMR power in the human motor cortex.
Electroencephalographic activity over the sensorimotor cortex has been one of the best studied targets for neurofeedback therapy. Parkinson's disease patients display abnormal brain rhythms in the motor cortex caused by increased synchrony in the basal ganglia-cortical pathway. Few studies have examined the effects of sensorimotor-based neurofeedback therapy in humans with PD. In this pilot study, one patient, diagnosed with Parkinson's disease 10 years prior, participated in two consecutive days of EEG neurofeedback training to increase sensorimotor rhythm (SMR) power over the motor cortex. Using a visual display connected to ongoing EEG, the patient voluntarily manipulated SMR power, and he/she was awarded with points to positively reinforce successful increases over a predefined threshold. Recorded EEG data were source localized and analyzed for the occurrence of high amplitude bursts of SMR activity as well as bursts in the beta frequency band in the precentral cortex. The rate of SMR bursts increased with each subsequent training session, while the rate of beta bursts only increased on the final session. Relative power in the beta band, a marker of PD symptom severity, decreased over the motor cortex in the later session. These results provide first evidence for the feasibility of SMR neurofeedback training as a non-invasive therapy for reducing Parkinson's disease related activity and upregulating SMR in the human motor cortex.

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