4.1 Article

Effects of Subthalamic Nucleus Deep Brain Stimulation on Objective Sleep Outcomes in Parkinson's Disease

Journal

MOVEMENT DISORDERS CLINICAL PRACTICE
Volume 4, Issue 2, Pages 183-190

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mdc3.12375

Keywords

Parkinson's disease; subthalamic nucleus; deep brain stimulation; sleep; vigilance

Funding

  1. National Institute of Neurological Disease and Stroke [K23 NS080912, K23 NS067053]
  2. American Sleep Medicine Foundation
  3. Frances and Ingeborg Heide Schumann Fellowship in Parkinson's Disease Research
  4. CCTS [UL1 TR001417]
  5. Medtronic [25677]

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BackgroundSleep dysfunction is a common and disabling nonmotor symptom in Parkinson's disease (PD). DBS of the STN improves motor symptoms and subjective sleep in PD, but alternative stimulation parameters to optimize sleep have not been explored. We hypothesized that low-frequency STN DBS would improve objective sleep more than conventional settings. MethodsTwenty PD subjects with STN DBS (18 unilateral, 2 bilateral) underwent 3 nonconsecutive nights of polysomnography (PSG): DBS off; DBS high frequency (130 Hz); and DBS low frequency (60 Hz). Motor symptom tolerability was assessed 30 minutes after resumption of baseline settings the morning following PSG. The primary outcome was change in sleep efficiency between high- and low-frequency nights measured with repeated-measures analysis of variance. ResultsThere was no difference in sleep efficiency between nights at high frequency (82.1% [72.6-90.1]) (median [interquartile range]), low frequency (81.2% [56.2-88.8]), or DBS off (82.8% [75.7-87.4]; P = 0.241). Additionally, there was no difference in sleep stage percent, arousals, limb movements, subjective sleep quality, or objective vigilance measures. These outcomes did not change after adjusting for age, sex, disease duration, or side of surgery. No residual adverse motor effects were noted. ConclusionsAlthough well tolerated, low-frequency STN DBS did not improve objective sleep in PD. Remarkably, objective measures of sleep were not worse with DBS off. These observations point to the potential for adaptive stimulation approaches, through which DBS settings could be optimized during sleep to meet individual needs. Additionally, these changes could preserve battery life without compromising patient outcomes.

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