Stimulus features underlying reduced tremor suppression with temporally patterned deep brain stimulation

Author:

Birdno Merrill J.1,Kuncel Alexis M.1,Dorval Alan D.12,Turner Dennis A.34,Gross Robert E.5,Grill Warren M.163

Affiliation:

1. Biomedical Engineering and

2. Bioengineering, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah; and

3. Surgery and

4. Neurosurgery, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina;

5. Department of Neurosurgery, Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia

6. Neurobiology, Duke University, and

Abstract

Deep brain stimulation (DBS) provides dramatic tremor relief when delivered at high-stimulation frequencies (more than ∼100 Hz), but its mechanisms of action are not well-understood. Previous studies indicate that high-frequency stimulation is less effective when the stimulation train is temporally irregular. The purpose of this study was to determine the specific characteristics of temporally irregular stimulus trains that reduce their effectiveness: long pauses, bursts, or irregularity per se. We isolated these characteristics in stimulus trains and conducted intraoperative measurements of postural tremor in eight volunteers. Tremor varied significantly across stimulus conditions ( P < 0.015), and stimulus trains with pauses were significantly less effective than stimulus trains without ( P < 0.002). There were no significant differences in tremor between trains with or without bursts or between trains that were irregular or periodic. Thus the decreased effectiveness of temporally irregular DBS trains is due to long pauses in the stimulus trains, not the degree of temporal irregularity alone. We also conducted computer simulations of neuronal responses to the experimental stimulus trains using a biophysical model of the thalamic network. Trains that suppressed tremor in volunteers also suppressed fluctuations in thalamic transmembrane potential at the frequency associated with cerebellar burst-driver inputs. Clinical and computational findings indicate that DBS suppresses tremor by masking burst-driver inputs to the thalamus and that pauses in stimulation prevent such masking. Although stimulation of other anatomic targets may provide tremor suppression, we propose that the most relevant neuronal targets for effective tremor suppression are the afferent cerebellar fibers that terminate in the thalamus.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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