Neurophysiological mechanisms of deep brain stimulation across spatiotemporal resolutions

Author:

Neumann Wolf-Julian1ORCID,Steiner Leon A12,Milosevic Luka23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Movement Disorder and Neuromodulation Unit, Department of Neurology, Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin , Berlin 10117 , Germany

2. Department of Clinical and Computational Neuroscience, Krembil Brain Institute, University Health Network , Toronto M5T 1M8 , Canada

3. Institute of Biomedical Engineering, Institute of Medical Sciences, and CRANIA Neuromodulation Institute, University of Toronto , Toronto M5S 3G9 , Canada

Abstract

Abstract Deep brain stimulation is a neuromodulatory treatment for managing the symptoms of Parkinson’s disease and other neurological and psychiatric disorders. Electrodes are chronically implanted in disease-relevant brain regions and pulsatile electrical stimulation delivery is intended to restore neurocircuit function. However, the widespread interest in the application and expansion of this clinical therapy has preceded an overarching understanding of the neurocircuit alterations invoked by deep brain stimulation. Over the years, various forms of neurophysiological evidence have emerged which demonstrate changes to brain activity across spatiotemporal resolutions; from single neuron, to local field potential, to brain-wide cortical network effects. Though fruitful, such studies have often led to debate about a singular putative mechanism. In this Update we aim to produce an integrative account of complementary instead of mutually exclusive neurophysiological effects to derive a generalizable concept of the mechanisms of deep brain stimulation. In particular, we offer a critical review of the most common historical competing theories, an updated discussion on recent literature from animal and human neurophysiological studies, and a synthesis of synaptic and network effects of deep brain stimulation across scales of observation, including micro-, meso- and macroscale circuit alterations.

Funder

Health Canada

Canada Brain Research Fund

Government of Canada

Brain Canada

Azrieli Foundation

Natural Sciences and Engineering Council

European Union

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

German Research Foundation

Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung

Junior Clinician Scientist Program of the Berlin Institute of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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