脑深部刺激
形状记忆合金*
刺激
神经科学
辅助电机区
心理学
肌张力障碍
纤维束成像
运动障碍
神经调节
医学
物理医学与康复
功能磁共振成像
磁共振弥散成像
磁共振成像
内科学
帕金森病
放射科
数学
疾病
组合数学
作者
Brendan Santyr,Aaron Loh,Artur Vetkas,Dave Gwun,Wilson Fung,S. Junaid S. Qazi,Jürgen Germann,Alexandre Boutet,Can Sarica,Andrew Yang,Gavin J.B. Elias,Suneil K. Kalia,Alfonso Fasano,Andrés M. Lozano
标识
DOI:10.1136/jnnp-2022-330734
摘要
Background The loss of the ability to swim following deep brain stimulation (DBS), although rare, poses a worrisome risk of drowning. It is unclear what anatomic substrate and neural circuitry underlie this phenomenon. We report a case of cervical dystonia with lost ability to swim and dance during active stimulation of globus pallidus internus. We investigated the anatomical underpinning of this phenomenon using unique functional and structural imaging analysis. Methods Tesla (3T) functional MRI (fMRI) of the patient was used during active DBS and compared with a cohort of four matched patients without this side effect. Structural connectivity mapping was used to identify brain network engagement by stimulation. Results fMRI during stimulation revealed significant (P bonferroni <0.0001) stimulation-evoked responses (DBS ON<OFF) in the supplementary motor area (SMA). Probabilistic tractography revealed that the patient’s VTAs engaged streamlines projecting to SMA. Compared with a cohort of matched controls, the stimulation-dependent change in blood oxygen level-dependent response at the SMA was 2.18 SD below the mean. Conclusions These stimulation-induced impairments are likely a manifestation of a broader deficit in interlimb coordination mediated by stimulation effects on the SMA. This neuroanatomical underpinning can help inform future patient-specific stimulation and targeting.
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