Bad oscillations in Parkinson's disease.

Recordings in humans as a result of functional neurosurgery have revealed a tendency for basal ganglia neurons to oscillate and synchronise their activity, giving rise to a rhythmic population activity, manifest as oscillatory local field potentials. The most important activity is synchronised oscil...

पूर्ण विवरण

ग्रंथसूची विवरण
मुख्य लेखक: Brown, P
स्वरूप: Journal article
भाषा:English
प्रकाशित: 2006
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author Brown, P
author_facet Brown, P
author_sort Brown, P
collection OXFORD
description Recordings in humans as a result of functional neurosurgery have revealed a tendency for basal ganglia neurons to oscillate and synchronise their activity, giving rise to a rhythmic population activity, manifest as oscillatory local field potentials. The most important activity is synchronised oscillation in the beta band (13-30 Hz), which has been picked up at various sites within the basal ganglia-cortical loop in PD. Dopaminergic medication and movement suppress this activity, with the timing and degree of suppression closely correlating with behavioural performance. Accordingly synchronisation in the beta band has been hypothesised to be essentially antikinetic in nature and pathophysiologically relevant to bradykinesia.
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spelling oxford-uuid:aa40cbd7-aacf-4fe7-9706-ffb2e6fae25e2022-03-27T03:13:48ZBad oscillations in Parkinson's disease.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:aa40cbd7-aacf-4fe7-9706-ffb2e6fae25eEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2006Brown, PRecordings in humans as a result of functional neurosurgery have revealed a tendency for basal ganglia neurons to oscillate and synchronise their activity, giving rise to a rhythmic population activity, manifest as oscillatory local field potentials. The most important activity is synchronised oscillation in the beta band (13-30 Hz), which has been picked up at various sites within the basal ganglia-cortical loop in PD. Dopaminergic medication and movement suppress this activity, with the timing and degree of suppression closely correlating with behavioural performance. Accordingly synchronisation in the beta band has been hypothesised to be essentially antikinetic in nature and pathophysiologically relevant to bradykinesia.
spellingShingle Brown, P
Bad oscillations in Parkinson's disease.
title Bad oscillations in Parkinson's disease.
title_full Bad oscillations in Parkinson's disease.
title_fullStr Bad oscillations in Parkinson's disease.
title_full_unstemmed Bad oscillations in Parkinson's disease.
title_short Bad oscillations in Parkinson's disease.
title_sort bad oscillations in parkinson s disease
work_keys_str_mv AT brownp badoscillationsinparkinsonsdisease