Parkinson Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Recording and Modulation of Brain Activity Through Chronically Implanted Stimulation Electrodes in Patients With Parkinson's Disease
For decades, deep brain stimulation (DBS) therapies have been employed very successfully to alleviate segmental motor symptoms (tremor, brady-kinesia or rigidity) in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). Unfortunately these therapies often fail to alleviate, or can even aggravate, axial deficits such gait and balance disorders. This is presumably due to the divergence in the dynamics of the circuits that control leg function, which are not well addressed with commonly employed stimulation protocols. To date, patients still endure life-long debilitating gait difficulties that severely affect their everyday mobility, independence and quality of life. In recent years, a handful of studies have proposed new paradigms, for instance using different stimulation parameters that are thought to be better suited for targeting the circuits that control lower limb function. Although promising, the resulting observations have been far from conclusive. As a result, the relevant approaches for therapeutic intervention remain unclear, and the underlying mechanisms largely unknown. Advances on the use of implantable neuromodulation devices and of tech-nologies for monitoring whole-body movement currently allow to study locomotor deficits in ecological environments, enabling the recording and modulation of motor and neural signals while patients perform activities of daily living, chronically, wirelessly and in real time.
This project seeks to leverage the latest technological innovations for monitoring and modulating motor and neural states chronically, in order to comprehensively characterize gait deficits in PD, and to clarify the improvements ushered in by varying DBS parameters. The resulting observations will establish a rigorous understanding that will open new avenues for the design of evidence-based, clinically-relevant DBS strategies for locomotor deficits. Advances on the use of neural implants for electrical neuromodulation of deep brain structures are opening the unique opportunity to probing the function of dysfunctional circuits in patients suffering from a variety of neurological disorders. To date, acute experiments using deep brain stimulation (DBS) implants, either in intra-operative setups or shortly after surgery during so-called "externalization" phases, have widened our understan-ding of the neural signatures that underlie various motor and non-motor symptoms, and helped optimi-ze therapeutical parameters to better address such impairments. For instance, DBS therapies in Parkinson's disease (PD) have been refined over the past decades based on experiments that synergistically (i) explored and uncovered readouts of movement perfor-mance in response to changing stimulation parameters, (ii) identified the underlying neural biomar-kers from recordings of local field potentials, and even (iii) tested closed-loop strategies able to adapt in real-time to ongoing patient-specific requirements. These advances have mostly been applied to (and been successful for) improving motor signs of the upper-limb such as tremor, bradykinesia or rigidity, which exhibit fast dynamical responses to changes in neuromodulation (in the range of minutes), and which can be studied in the context of simple motor tasks using tethered technologies while patients are safely sitting or lying. These conditions have made it possible to tweak, tune and optimize parameters based on simple easily measurable readouts of motor dysfunction, and to record neural signals with minimal movement-related artefacts in the meantime. Unfortunately, these straightforward experimental conditions do not apply to the study of axial motor signs, such as locomotion: - First, gait deficits are multi-faceted and high dimensional: Impairments are not merely restricted to leg movements, but also critically affect lower- and upper-limb coordination, trunk and pelvis oscillations, posture and balance. Their characterization thus requires of multi-modal sensing technologies and analytical methods able to capture all these aspects concurrently. - Second, the emergence of key deficits (e.g. freezing of gait) necessitates of behavioural tasks that are more physically demanding and potentially risky, often involving multiple repetitions of back-and-forth stepping over longer distances or in environments that resemble everyday life activities. Patients thus need to be in a stable medical condition, and technologies must allow recordings of motor and neural states to be performed wirelessly. - Finally, the modulation of neural circuits controlling gait have considerably slower dynamics in response to changes in DBS (up to several hours10) than those controlling upper limb function, hence imposing that monitoring and tuning protocols are stretched in time to appropriately capture such changes. These requirements critically put forward the need to study and devise novel therapies for gait deficits in the chronic state, using multi-modal technologies that can concurrently record neural and motor states remotely, in real-time and for long periods of time. This project seeks to leverage the latest technological innovations for monitoring and modulating motor and neural states chronically, in order to comprehensively characterize gait deficits in PD while patients execute a range of activities of daily living, and to clarify the improvements brought in by varying DBS parameters. In past years, a handful of studies have proposed new stimulation paradigms aimed to better target the neural circuits that control lower limb function during gait11. For instance strategies sought to combine varying DBS frequencies, or to target additional anatomical targets. They all highlighted promising, yet far-from-conclusive results. To date, the relevant approaches for therapeutic intervention remain unclear, and the underlying mechanisms largely unknown. Patients still endure life-long, debilitating gait difficulties that severely affect their everyday mobility and independence: they often feel insecure about leaving their homes due to the high risk of fall-related injuries, require personal assistance, and in general see their quality of life significantly diminished. ;
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