Fronto‐parieto‐subthalamic activity decodes motor status in Parkinson's disease

Author:

Zhang Quan1ORCID,Xie Hutao1,Zhao Baotian1,Yin Zixiao1,Liu Yuye2,Liu Defeng1,Bai Yutong1,Zhu Guanyu1,Qin Guofan1,Gan Yifei1,Tian Runfa1ORCID,Shi Lin1,Yang Anchao1,Meng Fangang2ORCID,Jiang Yin2ORCID,Zhang Jianguo123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery Beijing Tiantan Hospital, Capital Medical University Beijing China

2. Department of Functional Neurosurgery, Beijing Neurosurgical Institute Capital Medical University Beijing China

3. Beijing Key Laboratory of Neurostimulation Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractAimsPatients with Parkinson's disease (PD) have various motor difficulties, including standing up, gait initiation and freezing of gait. These abnormalities are associated with cortico‐subthalamic dysfunction. We aimed to reveal the characteristics of cortico‐subthalamic activity in PD patients during different motor statuses.MethodsPotentials were recorded in the superior parietal lobule (SPL), the primary motor cortex (M1), premotor cortex (PMC), and the bilateral subthalamic nucleus (STN) in 18 freely walking patients while sitting, standing, walking, dual‐task walking, and freezing in medication “off” (Moff) and “on” (Mon) states. Different motor status activities were compared in band power, and a machine learning classifier was used to differentiate the motor statuses.ResultsSPL beta power was specifically inhibited from standing to walking, and negatively correlated with walking speed; M1 beta power reflected the degree of rigidity and was reversed by medication; XGBoost algorithm classified the five motor statuses with acceptable accuracy (68.77% in Moff, 60.58% in Mon). SPL beta power ranked highest in feature importance in both Moff and Mon states.ConclusionSPL beta power plays an essential role in walking status classification and could be a physiological biomarker for walking speed, which would aid the development of adaptive DBS.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Physiology (medical),Psychiatry and Mental health,Pharmacology

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