Deep brain stimulation does not silence neurons in subthalamic nucleus in Parkinson's patients

JD Carlson, DR Cleary, JS Cetas… - Journal of …, 2010 - journals.physiology.org
JD Carlson, DR Cleary, JS Cetas, MM Heinricher, KJ Burchiel
Journal of neurophysiology, 2010journals.physiology.org
Two broad hypotheses have been advanced to explain the clinical efficacy of deep brain
stimulation (DBS) in the subthalamic nucleus (STN) for treatment of Parkinson's disease.
One is that stimulation inactivates STN neurons, producing a functional lesion. The other is
that electrical stimulation activates the STN output, thus “jamming” pathological activity in
basal ganglia-corticothalamic circuits. Evidence consistent with both concepts has been
adduced from modeling and animal studies, as well as from recordings in patients. However …
Two broad hypotheses have been advanced to explain the clinical efficacy of deep brain stimulation (DBS) in the subthalamic nucleus (STN) for treatment of Parkinson's disease. One is that stimulation inactivates STN neurons, producing a functional lesion. The other is that electrical stimulation activates the STN output, thus “jamming” pathological activity in basal ganglia-corticothalamic circuits. Evidence consistent with both concepts has been adduced from modeling and animal studies, as well as from recordings in patients. However, the stimulation parameters used in many recording studies have not been well matched to those used clinically. In this study, we recorded STN activity in patients with Parkinson's disease during stimulation delivered through a clinical DBS electrode using standard therapeutic stimulus parameters. A microelectrode was used to record the firing of a single STN neuron during DBS (3–5 V, 80–200 Hz, 90- to 200-μs pulses; 33 neurons/11 patients). Firing rate was unchanged during the stimulus trains, and the recorded neurons did not show prolonged (s) changes in firing rate on termination of the stimulation. However, a brief (∼1 ms), short-latency (6 ms) postpulse inhibition was seen in 10 of 14 neurons analyzed. A subset of neurons displayed altered firing patterns, with a predominant shift toward random firing. These data do not support the idea that DBS inactivates the STN and are instead more consistent with the hypothesis that this stimulation provides a null signal to basal ganglia-corticothalamic circuitry that has been altered as part of Parkinson's disease.
American Physiological Society