4.7 Article

Physiological mechanisms of thalamic ventral intermediate nucleus stimulation for tremor suppression

期刊

BRAIN
卷 141, 期 -, 页码 2142-2155

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/brain/awy139

关键词

clinical neurophysiology; deep brain stimulation; neurosurgery; tremor; Parkinson's disease

资金

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council [RGPIN-2016-06358]
  2. Dystonia Medical Research Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Ventral intermediate thalamic deep brain stimulation is a standard therapy for the treatment of medically refractory essential tremor and tremor-dominant Parkinson's disease. Despite the therapeutic benefits, the mechanisms of action are varied and complex, and the pathophysiology and genesis of tremor remain unsubstantiated. This intraoperative study investigated the effects of high frequency microstimulation on both neuronal firing and tremor suppression simultaneously. In each of nine essential tremor and two Parkinson's disease patients who underwent stereotactic neurosurgery, two closely spaced (600 mm) microelectrodes were advanced into the ventral intermediate nucleus. One microelectrode recorded action potential firing while the adjacent electrode delivered stimulation trains at 100 Hz and 200 Hz (2-5 s, 100 mu A, 150 mu s). A triaxial accelerometer was used to measure postural tremor of the contralateral hand. At 200 Hz, stimulation led to 68 +/- 8% (P50.001) inhibition of neuronal firing and a 53 +/- 5% (P50.001) reduction in tremor, while 100 Hz reduced firing by 26 +/- 12% (not significant) with a 17 +/- 6% (P50.05) tremor reduction. The degree of cell inhibition and tremor suppression were significantly correlated (P50.001). We also found that the most ventroposterior stimulation sites, closest to the border of the ventral caudal nucleus, had the best effect on tremor. Finally, prior to the inhibition of neuronal firing, microstimulation caused a transient driving of neuronal activity at stimulus onset (61% of sites), which gave rise to a tremor phase reset (73% of these sites). This was likely due to activation of the excitatory glutamatergic cortical and cerebellar afferents to the ventral intermediate nucleus. Temporal characteristics of the driving responses (duration, number of spikes, and onset latency) significantly differed between 100 Hz and 200 Hz stimulation trains. The subsequent inhibition of neuronal activity was likely due to synaptic fatigue. Thalamic neuronal inhibition seems necessary for tremor reduction and may function in effect as a thalamic filter to uncouple thalamo-cortical from cortico-spinal reflex loops. Additionally, our findings shed light on the gating properties of the ventral intermediate nucleus within the cerebello-thalamo-cortical tremor network, provide insight for the optimization of deep brain stimulation technologies, and may inform controlled clinical studies for assessing optimal target locations for the treatment of tremor.

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