4.3 Article

Pallidal Recordings in Chronically Implanted Dystonic Patients: Mitigation of Tremor-Related Artifacts

Journal

BIOENGINEERING-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering10040476

Keywords

dystonia; tremor; local field potentials; globus pallidus; deep brain stimulation

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Low-frequency oscillations in the pallidal local field potentials (LFPs) can be used as a physiomarker for dystonia and personalized adaptive deep brain stimulation. However, head tremor can cause movement artifacts in the LFP signals, which affects the reliability of low-frequency oscillations as biomarkers. This study investigated the pallidal LFPs in dystonia patients and used regression analysis to identify and remove tremor-related artifacts, with the inertial measurement unit (IMU) regression showing better results than electromyographic signal (EMG) regression in artifact removal.
Low-frequency oscillatory patterns of pallidal local field potentials (LFPs) have been proposed as a physiomarker for dystonia and hold the promise for personalized adaptive deep brain stimulation. Head tremor, a low-frequency involuntary rhythmic movement typical of cervical dystonia, may cause movement artifacts in LFP signals, compromising the reliability of low-frequency oscillations as biomarkers for adaptive neurostimulation. We investigated chronic pallidal LFPs with the Percept(TM) PC (Medtronic PLC) device in eight subjects with dystonia (five with head tremors). We applied a multiple regression approach to pallidal LFPs in patients with head tremors using kinematic information measured with an inertial measurement unit (IMU) and an electromyographic signal (EMG). With IMU regression, we found tremor contamination in all subjects, whereas EMG regression identified it in only three out of five. IMU regression was also superior to EMG regression in removing tremor-related artifacts and resulted in a significant power reduction, especially in the theta-alpha band. Pallido-muscular coherence was affected by a head tremor and disappeared after IMU regression. Our results show that the Percept PC can record low-frequency oscillations but also reveal spectral contamination due to movement artifacts. IMU regression can identify such artifact contamination and be a suitable tool for its removal.

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