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Sensorimotor cortical-subthalamic network dynamics during force generation

Authors :
Donald J. Crammond
Thomas A. Wozny
R. Mark Richardson
Nathan E. Crone
Witold J. Lipski
Anna Korzeniewska
Efstathios D. Kondylis
Avniel Singh Ghuman
Ahmad Alhourani
Robert Turner
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2018.

Abstract

The subthalamic nucleus (STN) is proposed to participate in pausing, or alternately, in dynamic scaling of behavioral responses, roles that have conflicting implications for understanding STN function in the context of deep brain stimulation (DBS) therapy. To examine the nature of event-related STN activity and subthalamic-cortical dynamics, we performed primary motor and somatosensory electrocorticography while subjects (n=10) performed a grip force task during DBS implantation surgery. The results provide the first evidence from humans that STN gamma activity can predict activity in the cortex both prior to and during movement, consistent with the idea that the STN participates in both motor planning and execution. We observed that STN activity appeared to facilitate movement: while both movement onset and termination both coincided with STN-cortical phase-locking, narrow-band gamma power was positively correlated with grip force, and event-related causality measures demonstrated that STN gamma activity predicted cortical gamma activity during movement. STN participation in somatosensory integration also was demonstrated by casual analysis. Information flow from the STN to somatosensory cortex was observed for both beta and gamma range frequencies, specific to particular movement periods and kinematics. Interactions in beta activity between the STN and somatosensory cortex, rather than motor cortex, predicted PD symptom severity. Thus, the STN contributes to multiple aspects of sensorimotor behavior dynamically across time.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1075a4cee9e5d6a296cc2a811fa7ba3b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/306332