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J Neurophysiol (July 18, 2007). doi:10.1152/jn.00547.2007
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Submitted on May 15, 2007
Accepted on July 15, 2007

Pulse-to-pulse changes in the frequency of deep brain stimulation affect tremor and modeled neuronal activity

Merrill J Birdno1, Scott E Cooper2, Ali R Rezai3, and Warren M. Grill1*

1 Biomedical Engineering, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, United States
2 Center for Neurological Restoration, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio, United States
3 Neurological Surgery, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio, United States

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: warren.grill{at}duke.edu.

The effectiveness of deep brain stimulation (DBS) in relieving the symptoms of movement disorders is dependent on the average frequency of stimulation. However, no one has yet examined whether the effectiveness of DBS in relieving tremor is dependent on the pulse-to-pulse (instantaneous) frequency of DBS. We examined the effects of paired pulse thalamic DBS on tremor in subjects with essential tremor and on the firing of model neurons in a biophysically based computational model of DBS. DBS with an average rate of 130 Hz was more effective at reducing tremor when pulses were evenly spaced than when there were large differences between intra-pair and inter-pair pulse intervals. Similar correlations were observed in model neurons firing patterns: increasing the difference between the intra-pair and inter-pair intervals rendered model neurons more likely to fire synchronous bursts, more likely to fire irregularly, and less likely to entrain to the stimulus. The tremor responses provide evidence that the pulse-to-pulse frequency of DBS, not just its average rate, plays an important role in DBS function. Modeling results also suggest that effective DBS overrides oscillatory pathological activity and replaces it with more regularized neuronal firing patterns.







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