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  4. Spatio-temporal structure of single neuron subthalamic activity identifies DBS target for anesthetized Tourette syndrome patients
 
research article

Spatio-temporal structure of single neuron subthalamic activity identifies DBS target for anesthetized Tourette syndrome patients

Vissani, Matteo
•
Cordella, Roberto
•
Micera, Silvestro  
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December 1, 2019
Journal Of Neural Engineering

Objective. Deep brain stimulation (DBS) of basal ganglia effectively tackles motor symptoms of movement disorders such as Tourette syndrome (TS). The precise location of target stimulation site determines the range of clinical outcome in DBS patients, and the occurrence of side-effects of DBS. DBS implant procedures currently localize stimulation target relying on a combination of pre-surgical imaging, standardized brain atlases and on-the-spot clinical tests. Here we show that temporal structure of single unit activity in subthalamic nucleus (STN) of patients affected by pure TS can contribute to identify the optimal target location of DBS. Approach. Neural activity was recorded at different depths within STN with microelectrodes during DBS implant surgery. Depth specific neural features were extracted and correlated with the optimal depth for tic control. Main results. We describe for the first time temporal spike patterns of single neurons from sensorimotor STN of anesthetized TS patients. A large fraction of units (31.2%) displayed intense bursting in the delta band (<4 Hz). The highest firing irregularity and hence the higher density of bursting units (42%) were found at the optimal spot for tic control. Discharge patterns irregularity and dominant oscillations frequency (but not firing rate) carried significant information on optimal target. Significance. We found single unit activity features in the STN of TS patients reliably associated to optimal DBS target site for tic control. In future works measures of firing irregularity could be integrated with current target localization methods leading to a more effective and safer DBS for TS patients.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1088/1741-2552/ab37b4
Web of Science ID

WOS:000503792000009

Author(s)
Vissani, Matteo
Cordella, Roberto
Micera, Silvestro  
Eleopra, Roberto
Romito, Luigi M.
Mazzoni, Alberto
Date Issued

2019-12-01

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD

Published in
Journal Of Neural Engineering
Volume

16

Issue

6

Article Number

066011

Subjects

Engineering, Biomedical

•

Neurosciences

•

Engineering

•

Neurosciences & Neurology

•

deep brain stimulation

•

microrecordings

•

subthalamic nucleus

•

tourette syndrome

•

movement disorders

•

deep-brain-stimulation

•

parkinsons-disease

•

thalamic-stimulation

•

primate model

•

double-blind

•

long-term

•

nucleus

•

tics

•

localization

•

improvement

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
TNE  
Available on Infoscience
January 5, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/164340
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