Structural and functional correlates of subthalamic deep brain stimulation-induced apathy in Parkinson's disease
Creators
- Boon, Lennard I.
- Potters, Wouter V.
- Zoon, Thomas J. C.
- van den Heuvel, Odile A.
- Prent, Naomi
- Bie, R.-O.-B. M. A. de
- de Bie, Rob M. A.
- Bot, Maarten
- Schuurman, P. Richard
- van den Munckhof, Pepijn
- Geurtsen, Gert J.
- Hillebrand, Arjan
- Stam, Cornelis J.
- Rootselaar, Anne-Fleur van
- van Rootselaar, Anne-Fleur
- Berendse, Henk W.
Description
AbstractBackgroundNotwithstanding the large improvement in motor function in Parkinson's disease (PD) patients treated with deep brain stimulation (DBS), apathy may increase. Postoperative apathy cannot always be related to a dose reduction of dopaminergic medication and stimulation itself may play a role.ObjectiveWe studied whether apathy in DBS-treated PD patients could be a stimulation effect.MethodsIn 26 PD patients we acquired apathy scores before and >6 months after DBS of the subthalamic nucleus (STN). Magnetoencephalography recordings (ON and OFF stimulation) were performed ≥6 months after DBS placement. Change in apathy severity was correlated with (i) improvement in motor function and dose reduction of dopaminergic medication, (ii) stimulation location (merged MRI and CT-scans) and (iii) stimulation-related changes in functional connectivity of brain regions that have an alleged role in apathy.ResultsAverage apathy severity significantly increased after DBS (p < 0.001) and the number of patients considered apathetic increased from two to nine. Change in apathy severity did not correlate with improvement in motor function or dose reduction of dopaminergic medication. For the left hemisphere, increase in apathy was associated with a more dorsolateral stimulation location (p = 0.010). The increase in apathy severity correlated with a decrease in alpha1 functional connectivity of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (p = 0.006), but not with changes of the medial orbitofrontal or the anterior cingulate cortex.ConclusionsThe present observations suggest that apathy after STN-DBS is not necessarily related to dose reductions of dopaminergic medication, but may be an effect of the stimulation itself. This highlights the importance of determining optimal DBS settings based on both motor and non-motor symptoms.
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