Changes in cortical excitability during paired associative stimulation in Parkinson's disease patients and healthy subjects
Abstract
Paired associative stimulation (PAS) combines repetitive peripheral nerve stimulation with motor cortex (M1) transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), to induce plastic-like changes of cortical excitability. While much attention has been dedicated to post-PAS effects little is known about processes during PAS. We compared the time-course of changes in M1 excitability during standard facilitatory PAS intervention among patients with Parkinsons disease (PD), known to have diminished post-PAS response, and healthy subjects. Compared to baseline pre-PAS MEPs, conditioned MEPs during PAS decreased significantly in both groups. The decrease was significantly larger in healthy subjects than in PD patients, regardless whether patients were drug-naive or not. Although post-PAS excitability increase was also larger in healthy subjects than in PD patients, there was no significant correlation between the two phenomena, i.e. the extent of MEP decrease during PAS and the extent of the post-PAS excit...ability increase. The results highlight an apparent physiological paradox that repetitive application of an inhibitory stimulation pattern leads to subsequent prolonged facilitation, thus broadening the understanding of the phenomenology of PAS response. Results also suggest that in PD cortical circuits involved in conveying inhibition during PAS, are impaired at the clinical onset of the disease and are not influenced by subsequent PD treatment.
Keywords:
Paired associative stimulation / Transcranial magnetic stimulation / Cortical excitability / Afferent inhibition / Parkinson's disease / Sensory motor integrationSource:
Neuroscience Research, 2017, 124, 51-56Publisher:
- Elsevier Ireland Ltd, Clare
Funding / projects:
DOI: 10.1016/j.neures.2017.06.001
ISSN: 0168-0102
PubMed: 28606723
WoS: 000414036400007
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85020738000
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Institution/Community
Institut za medicinska istraživanjaTY - JOUR AU - Kačar, Aleksandra AU - Milanović, Slađan AU - Filipović, Saša AU - Ljubisavljević, Miloš PY - 2017 UR - http://rimi.imi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/792 AB - Paired associative stimulation (PAS) combines repetitive peripheral nerve stimulation with motor cortex (M1) transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), to induce plastic-like changes of cortical excitability. While much attention has been dedicated to post-PAS effects little is known about processes during PAS. We compared the time-course of changes in M1 excitability during standard facilitatory PAS intervention among patients with Parkinsons disease (PD), known to have diminished post-PAS response, and healthy subjects. Compared to baseline pre-PAS MEPs, conditioned MEPs during PAS decreased significantly in both groups. The decrease was significantly larger in healthy subjects than in PD patients, regardless whether patients were drug-naive or not. Although post-PAS excitability increase was also larger in healthy subjects than in PD patients, there was no significant correlation between the two phenomena, i.e. the extent of MEP decrease during PAS and the extent of the post-PAS excitability increase. The results highlight an apparent physiological paradox that repetitive application of an inhibitory stimulation pattern leads to subsequent prolonged facilitation, thus broadening the understanding of the phenomenology of PAS response. Results also suggest that in PD cortical circuits involved in conveying inhibition during PAS, are impaired at the clinical onset of the disease and are not influenced by subsequent PD treatment. PB - Elsevier Ireland Ltd, Clare T2 - Neuroscience Research T1 - Changes in cortical excitability during paired associative stimulation in Parkinson's disease patients and healthy subjects EP - 56 SP - 51 VL - 124 DO - 10.1016/j.neures.2017.06.001 UR - conv_4160 ER -
@article{ author = "Kačar, Aleksandra and Milanović, Slađan and Filipović, Saša and Ljubisavljević, Miloš", year = "2017", abstract = "Paired associative stimulation (PAS) combines repetitive peripheral nerve stimulation with motor cortex (M1) transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), to induce plastic-like changes of cortical excitability. While much attention has been dedicated to post-PAS effects little is known about processes during PAS. We compared the time-course of changes in M1 excitability during standard facilitatory PAS intervention among patients with Parkinsons disease (PD), known to have diminished post-PAS response, and healthy subjects. Compared to baseline pre-PAS MEPs, conditioned MEPs during PAS decreased significantly in both groups. The decrease was significantly larger in healthy subjects than in PD patients, regardless whether patients were drug-naive or not. Although post-PAS excitability increase was also larger in healthy subjects than in PD patients, there was no significant correlation between the two phenomena, i.e. the extent of MEP decrease during PAS and the extent of the post-PAS excitability increase. The results highlight an apparent physiological paradox that repetitive application of an inhibitory stimulation pattern leads to subsequent prolonged facilitation, thus broadening the understanding of the phenomenology of PAS response. Results also suggest that in PD cortical circuits involved in conveying inhibition during PAS, are impaired at the clinical onset of the disease and are not influenced by subsequent PD treatment.", publisher = "Elsevier Ireland Ltd, Clare", journal = "Neuroscience Research", title = "Changes in cortical excitability during paired associative stimulation in Parkinson's disease patients and healthy subjects", pages = "56-51", volume = "124", doi = "10.1016/j.neures.2017.06.001", url = "conv_4160" }
Kačar, A., Milanović, S., Filipović, S.,& Ljubisavljević, M.. (2017). Changes in cortical excitability during paired associative stimulation in Parkinson's disease patients and healthy subjects. in Neuroscience Research Elsevier Ireland Ltd, Clare., 124, 51-56. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neures.2017.06.001 conv_4160
Kačar A, Milanović S, Filipović S, Ljubisavljević M. Changes in cortical excitability during paired associative stimulation in Parkinson's disease patients and healthy subjects. in Neuroscience Research. 2017;124:51-56. doi:10.1016/j.neures.2017.06.001 conv_4160 .
Kačar, Aleksandra, Milanović, Slađan, Filipović, Saša, Ljubisavljević, Miloš, "Changes in cortical excitability during paired associative stimulation in Parkinson's disease patients and healthy subjects" in Neuroscience Research, 124 (2017):51-56, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neures.2017.06.001 ., conv_4160 .