학술논문

Adaptive Deep Brain Stimulation for sleep stage targeting in Parkinsons disease.
Document Type
article
Source
Brain Stimulation. 16(5)
Subject
Adaptive Deep Brain Stimulation
Parkinson’s disease
Real-time neural control
Sleep
Humans
Parkinson Disease
Deep Brain Stimulation
Sleep Stages
Sleep
Electrocorticography
Language
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sleep dysfunction is disabling in people with Parkinsons disease and is linked to worse motor and non-motor outcomes. Sleep-specific adaptive Deep Brain Stimulation has the potential to target pathophysiologies of sleep. OBJECTIVE: Develop an adaptive Deep Brain Stimulation algorithm that modulates stimulation parameters in response to intracranially classified sleep stages. METHODS: We performed at-home, multi-night intracranial electrocorticography and polysomnogram recordings to train personalized linear classifiers for discriminating the N3 NREM sleep stage. Classifiers were embedded into investigational Deep Brain Stimulators for N3 specific adaptive DBS. RESULTS: We report high specificity of embedded, autonomous, intracranial electrocorticography N3 sleep stage classification across two participants and provide proof-of-principle of successful sleep stage specific adaptive Deep Brain Stimulation. CONCLUSION: Multi-night cortico-basal recordings and sleep specific adaptive Deep Brain Stimulation provide an experimental framework to investigate sleep pathophysiology and mechanistic interactions with stimulation, towards the development of therapeutic neurostimulation paradigms directly targeting sleep dysfunction.