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Motor Network Physiology
Sponsor: University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Summary
The brain networks controlling movement are complex, involving multiple areas of the brain. Some neurological disorders, like Parkinson's disease (PD) and essential tremor (ET), cause abnormalities in these brain networks. Deep brain stimulation is a treatment that is used to treat these types of neurological diseases and is thought to help patients by modulating brain networks responsible for movement. Levodopa medication is also used to modulate this brain networks in patients with PD. The overall objective is to develop a unified theory of basal ganglia thalamocortical (BGTC) circuit dynamics that accounts for disease symptomatology, movement, and their inter-relationship. The underlying hypothesis, is that the rigidity and bradykinesia of PD are fundamentally related to excessive functional coupling across nodes in the BGTC motor circuit impeding effective information flow. In this research, the investigator will take advantage of the unique opportunity provided by awake deep brain stimulation surgery to learn more about how the brain functions in a diseased state and how deep brain stimulation changes these networks to make movement more normal. The investigator will simultaneously assess cortical and subcortical electrophysiology in relation to clinical symptoms and behavioral measures and in response to deep brain stimulation, cortical stimulation, and pharmacologic therapy in patients undergoing Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) implantation surgery.
Official title: Motor Network Physiology Characterization During Deep Brain Stimulation Surgery
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 89 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
120
Start Date
2022-02-18
Completion Date
2028-12-01
Last Updated
2025-08-14
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Apomorphine Injectable Solution
Apomorphine injected for therapeutic relief
Subcortical Stimulation
Subcortical simulation of the deep brain stimulation surgery target site will be applied by clinically placed deep brain stimulation electrodes at the previously determined therapeutic setting
Locations (1)
UT Southwestern Medical Center
Dallas, Texas, United States