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Differential effects of deep brain stimulation and levodopa on brain activity in Parkinson's disease

Authors :
Karsten, Mueller
Dušan, Urgošík
Tommaso, Ballarini
Štefan, Holiga
Harald E, Möller
Filip, Růžička
Jan, Roth
Josef, Vymazal
Matthias L, Schroeter
Evžen, Růžička
Robert, Jech
Source :
Brain Communications
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Levodopa is the first-line treatment for Parkinson’s disease, although the precise mechanisms mediating its efficacy remain elusive. We aimed to elucidate treatment effects of levodopa on brain activity during the execution of fine movements and to compare them with deep brain stimulation of the subthalamic nuclei. We studied 32 patients with Parkinson’s disease using functional MRI during the execution of finger-tapping task, alternating epochs of movement and rest. The task was performed after withdrawal and administration of a single levodopa dose. A subgroup of patients (n = 18) repeated the experiment after electrode implantation with stimulator on and off. Investigating levodopa treatment, we found a significant interaction between both factors of treatment state (off, on) and experimental task (finger tapping, rest) in bilateral putamen, but not in other motor regions. Specifically, during the off state of levodopa medication, activity in the putamen at rest was higher than during tapping. This represents an aberrant activity pattern probably indicating the derangement of basal ganglia network activity due to the lack of dopaminergic input. Levodopa medication reverted this pattern, so that putaminal activity during finger tapping was higher than during rest, as previously described in healthy controls. Within-group comparison with deep brain stimulation underlines the specificity of our findings with levodopa treatment. Indeed, a significant interaction was observed between treatment approach (levodopa, deep brain stimulation) and treatment state (off, on) in bilateral putamen. Our functional MRI study compared for the first time the differential effects of levodopa treatment and deep brain stimulation on brain motor activity. We showed modulatory effects of levodopa on brain activity of the putamen during finger movement execution, which were not observed with deep brain stimulation.<br />The study shows fundamentally different effects of symptomatic treatment in Parkinson's disease on activity of motor network during motion and rest. The decreased motion-related activity in the putamen after medication withdrawal was reversed by levodopa but not with subthalamic deep brain stimulation.<br />Graphical Abstract Graphical Abstract

Details

ISSN :
26321297
Volume :
2
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brain communications
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........251da4f37e89ca6133cf13027379f9ee