Persistent suppression of subthalamic beta-band activity during rhythmic finger tapping in Parkinson's disease

Objective: The function of synchronous oscillatory activity at beta band (15-30. Hz) frequencies within the basal ganglia is unclear. Here we sought support for the hypothesis that beta activity has a global function within the basal ganglia and is not directly involved in the coding of specific bio...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Joundi, R, Brittain, J, Green, A, Aziz, T, Brown, P, Jenkinson, N
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2013
_version_ 1797052027917828096
author Joundi, R
Brittain, J
Green, A
Aziz, T
Brown, P
Jenkinson, N
author_facet Joundi, R
Brittain, J
Green, A
Aziz, T
Brown, P
Jenkinson, N
author_sort Joundi, R
collection OXFORD
description Objective: The function of synchronous oscillatory activity at beta band (15-30. Hz) frequencies within the basal ganglia is unclear. Here we sought support for the hypothesis that beta activity has a global function within the basal ganglia and is not directly involved in the coding of specific biomechanical parameters of movement. Methods: We recorded local field potential activity from the subthalamic nuclei of 11 patients with Parkinson's disease during a synchronized tapping task at three different externally cued rates. Results: Beta activity was suppressed during tapping, reaching a minimum that differed little across the different tapping rates despite an increase in velocity of finger movements. Thus beta power suppression was independent of specific motor parameters. Moreover, although beta oscillations remained suppressed during all tapping rates, periods of resynchronization between taps were markedly attenuated during high rate tapping. As such, a beta rebound above baseline between taps at the lower rates was absent at the high rate. Conclusion: Our results demonstrate that beta desynchronization in the region of the subthalamic nucleus is independent of motor parameters and that the beta resynchronization is differentially modulated by rate of finger tapping,. Significance: These findings implicate consistent beta suppression in the facilitation of continuous movement sequences. © 2012 International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T18:27:10Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:086073fd-f230-45fb-938a-307eb35a9f83
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T18:27:10Z
publishDate 2013
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:086073fd-f230-45fb-938a-307eb35a9f832022-03-26T09:12:36ZPersistent suppression of subthalamic beta-band activity during rhythmic finger tapping in Parkinson's diseaseJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:086073fd-f230-45fb-938a-307eb35a9f83EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2013Joundi, RBrittain, JGreen, AAziz, TBrown, PJenkinson, NObjective: The function of synchronous oscillatory activity at beta band (15-30. Hz) frequencies within the basal ganglia is unclear. Here we sought support for the hypothesis that beta activity has a global function within the basal ganglia and is not directly involved in the coding of specific biomechanical parameters of movement. Methods: We recorded local field potential activity from the subthalamic nuclei of 11 patients with Parkinson's disease during a synchronized tapping task at three different externally cued rates. Results: Beta activity was suppressed during tapping, reaching a minimum that differed little across the different tapping rates despite an increase in velocity of finger movements. Thus beta power suppression was independent of specific motor parameters. Moreover, although beta oscillations remained suppressed during all tapping rates, periods of resynchronization between taps were markedly attenuated during high rate tapping. As such, a beta rebound above baseline between taps at the lower rates was absent at the high rate. Conclusion: Our results demonstrate that beta desynchronization in the region of the subthalamic nucleus is independent of motor parameters and that the beta resynchronization is differentially modulated by rate of finger tapping,. Significance: These findings implicate consistent beta suppression in the facilitation of continuous movement sequences. © 2012 International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology.
spellingShingle Joundi, R
Brittain, J
Green, A
Aziz, T
Brown, P
Jenkinson, N
Persistent suppression of subthalamic beta-band activity during rhythmic finger tapping in Parkinson's disease
title Persistent suppression of subthalamic beta-band activity during rhythmic finger tapping in Parkinson's disease
title_full Persistent suppression of subthalamic beta-band activity during rhythmic finger tapping in Parkinson's disease
title_fullStr Persistent suppression of subthalamic beta-band activity during rhythmic finger tapping in Parkinson's disease
title_full_unstemmed Persistent suppression of subthalamic beta-band activity during rhythmic finger tapping in Parkinson's disease
title_short Persistent suppression of subthalamic beta-band activity during rhythmic finger tapping in Parkinson's disease
title_sort persistent suppression of subthalamic beta band activity during rhythmic finger tapping in parkinson s disease
work_keys_str_mv AT joundir persistentsuppressionofsubthalamicbetabandactivityduringrhythmicfingertappinginparkinsonsdisease
AT brittainj persistentsuppressionofsubthalamicbetabandactivityduringrhythmicfingertappinginparkinsonsdisease
AT greena persistentsuppressionofsubthalamicbetabandactivityduringrhythmicfingertappinginparkinsonsdisease
AT azizt persistentsuppressionofsubthalamicbetabandactivityduringrhythmicfingertappinginparkinsonsdisease
AT brownp persistentsuppressionofsubthalamicbetabandactivityduringrhythmicfingertappinginparkinsonsdisease
AT jenkinsonn persistentsuppressionofsubthalamicbetabandactivityduringrhythmicfingertappinginparkinsonsdisease