4.7 Article

Subthalamic deep brain stimulation affects heading perception in Parkinson's disease

期刊

JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY
卷 269, 期 1, 页码 253-268

出版社

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00415-021-10616-4

关键词

Vestibular; Visual; Optic flow; Motion perception; Cerebellum; Basal ganglia

资金

  1. American Academy of Neurology Career Award
  2. American Parkinson's Disease Association George C Cotzias Memorial Fellowship
  3. Dystonia Medical Research Foundation Research Grant

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study revealed that patients with Parkinson's disease showed lower accuracy in vestibular perception compared to healthy controls, but significant improvement was observed after deep brain stimulation treatment. However, there were no significant differences in visual heading perception between patients and controls.
Parkinson's disease (PD) presents with visuospatial impairment and falls. It is critical to understand how subthalamic deep brain stimulation (STN DBS) modulates visuospatial perception. We hypothesized that DBS has different effects on visual and vestibular perception of linear motion (heading), a critical aspect of visuospatial navigation; and such effects are specific to modulated STN location. Two-alternative forced-choice experiments were performed in 14 PD patients with bilateral STN DBS and 19 age-matched healthy controls (HC) during passive en bloc linear motion and 3D optic-flow in immersive virtual reality measured vestibular and visual heading. Objective measure of perception with Weibull psychometric function revealed that PD has significantly lower accuracy [L: 60.71 (17.86)%, R: 74.82 (17.44)%] and higher thresholds [L: 16.68 (12.83), R: 10.09 (7.35)] during vestibular task in both directions compared to HC (p < 0.05). DBS significantly improved vestibular discrimination accuracy [81.40 (14.36)%] and threshold [4.12 (5.87), p < 0.05] in the rightward direction. There were no DBS effects on the slopes of vestibular psychometric curves. Visual heading perception was better than vestibular and it was comparable to HC. There was no significant effect of DBS on visual heading response accuracy or discrimination threshold (p > 0.05). Patient-specific DBS models revealed an association between change in vestibular heading perception and the modulation of the dorsal STN. In summary, DBS may have different effects on vestibular and visual heading perception in PD. These effects may manifest via dorsal STN putatively by its effects on the cerebellum.

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