Author:
Singh Arun,Cole Rachel C.,Espinoza Arturo I.,Brown Darin,Cavanagh James F.,Narayanan Nandakumar
Abstract
ABSTRACTBackgroundMotor and cognitive dysfunction has been linked in patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD). EEG theta and beta rhythms are reliably associated with cognitive and motor functions, respectively. We tested the hypothesis that PD patients with lower-limb abnormalities would exhibit abnormal beta and theta rhythms in the mid-frontal region during action initiation.MethodsWe recruited thirty-nine subjects, including PD patients with FOG (PDFOG+; n=13) and without FOG (PDFOG−; n=13), and demographically-matched healthy subjects (n=13). Scalp electroencephalogram (EEG) signals were collected during a lower-limb pedaling motor task, which required intentional initiation and stopping of a motor movement.ResultsFOG scores were correlated with disease severity and cognition. PDFOG+ patients pedaled with reduced speed and decreased acceleration compared to PDFOG− patients and to controls. PDFOG+ patients exhibited attenuated theta-band (4-8 Hz) power and increased beta-band (13-30 Hz) power at mid-frontal electrode Cz during pedaling. Frontal theta- and beta-band oscillations also correlated with lower-limb movement in PD patients.ConclusionsFrontal theta and beta oscillations are predictors of lower-limb motor symptoms in PD. These data provide insight into the mechanism of lower-limb dysfunction in PD, and could be used to design neuromodulation for PD-related lower-limb abnormalities.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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