Subthalamic low beta bursts differ in Parkinson's disease phenotypes

Clin Neurophysiol. 2022 Aug:140:45-58. doi: 10.1016/j.clinph.2022.05.013. Epub 2022 Jun 7.

Abstract

Objective: Parkinson's disease (PD) patients may be categorized into tremor-dominant (TD) and postural-instability and gait disorder (PIGD) motor phenotypes, but the dynamical aspects of subthalamic nucleus local field potentials (STN-LFP) and the neural correlates of this phenotypical classification remain unclear.

Methods: 35 STN-LFP (20 PIGD and 15 TD) were investigated through continuous wavelet transform and machine-learning-based methods. The beta oscillation - the main band associated with motor impairment in PD - dynamics was characterized through beta burst parameters across phenotypes and burst intervals under specific proposed criteria for optimal burst threshold definition.

Results: Low-frequency (13-22 Hz) beta burst probability was the best predictor for PD phenotypes (75% accuracy). PIGD patients presented higher average burst duration (p = 0.018), while TD patients exhibited higher burst probability (p = 0.014). Categorization into shorter and longer than 400 ms bursts led to significant interaction between burst length categories and the phenotypes (p < 0.050) as revealed by mixed-effects models. Long burst durations and short bursts probability positively correlated, respectively, with rigidity-bradykinesia (p = 0.029) and tremor (p = 0.038) scores.

Conclusions: Subthalamic low-frequency beta bursts differed between TD and PIGD phenotypes and correlated with motor symptoms.

Significance: These findings improve the PD phenotypes' electrophysiological characterization and may define new criteria for adaptive deep brain stimulation.

Keywords: Bradykinesia; Brain waves; Parkinson’s disease; Postural instability and gait disorder; Rigidity; Tremor.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Deep Brain Stimulation*
  • Gait
  • Humans
  • Parkinson Disease* / diagnosis
  • Parkinson Disease* / therapy
  • Phenotype
  • Subthalamic Nucleus*
  • Tremor / diagnosis