In Parkinson’s disease on a probabilistic Go/NoGo task deep brain stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus only interferes with withholding of the most prepotent responses

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Abstract

The evidence on the impact of subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation (STN-DBS) on action restraint on Go/NoGO reaction time (RT) tasks in Parkinson’s disease (PD) is inconsistent; with some studies reporting no effect and others finding that STN stimulation interferes with withholding of responses and results in more commission errors relative to STN-DBS off. We used a task in which the probability of Go stimuli varied from 100 % (simple RT task) to 80, 50 and 20 % (probabilistic Go/NoGo RT task), thus altering the prepotency of the response and the difficulty in withholding it on NoGo trials. Twenty PD patients with STN-DBS, ten unoperated PD patients and ten healthy controls participated in the study. All participants were tested twice; the order of on versus off stimulation for STN-DBS PD patients was counterbalanced. Both STN-DBS and unoperated PD patients were tested on medication. The results indicated that STN-DBS selectively decreased discriminability when the response was most prepotent (high—80 %, as compared to low Go probability trials—50 and 20 %). Movement times were faster with STN stimulation than with DBS off across different Go probability levels. There was neither an overall nor a selective effect of STN-DBS on RTs depending on the level of Go probability. Furthermore, compared to healthy controls, both STN-DBS and unoperated PD patients were more prone to making anticipatory errors; which was not influenced by STN stimulation. The results provide evidence for ‘load-dependent’ effects of STN stimulation on action restraint as a function of the prepotency of the Go response.

Figures

  • Table 1 Studies investigating the effect of subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation (STN-DBS) on Go/NoGo task performance in PD
  • Table 2 Main demographic and clinical data for the participants in the study
  • Fig. 1 Schematic representation of the Go/NoGo task used in the study. As soon as the home key was pressed, a fixation cross was presented on the monitor for 1000 ms; this was followed by the auditory warning stimulus S1. After a variable interval of 500 or 1000 ms, the visual S2 stimulus was presented (Go—green square, or NoGo—red square). There were four different blocks with four levels of Go stimulus probability levels—100 % (SRT), 80 % (pGNG80), 50 % (pGNG50) and 20 % (pGNG20). For details, please see “Methods” (color figure online)
  • Table 3 Mean values and standard error of the mean (SEM) in brackets for the hit rate, commission error rate, anticipation error rate and discriminability (Pr) index for PD patients with STN-DBS ON and OFF, PD control patients (PD Con) and healthy controls (HC) 1st and 2nd assessment in all tasks: simple reaction time (SRT), and probabilistic Go/NoGo task with three levels of Go signal probability—pGNG80, pGNG50 and pGNG20
  • Fig. 2 Significant interaction effects for the discriminability index (Pr) (a) and anticipatory error rate (AnER) (b) for PD patients with STN-DBS (PD STN-DBS), unoperated PD (PD Con) and healthy controls (Con) for four different levels of Go stimulus probability levels—100 % (SRT), 80 % (pGNG80), 50 % (pGNG50) and 20 % (pGNG20). DBS ON on stimulation, DBS OFF off stimulation. The asterisk (*) indicates significant difference (p < 0.05)
  • Fig. 3 Reaction times (RT) and movement times (MT) for the correct Go responses for patients with STN-DBS (PD STN-DBS) (a, b), PD controls (c, d) and healthy controls (e, f) for four different levels of Go stimulus probability levels—100 % (SRT), 80 % (pGNG80), 50 % (pGNG50) and 20 % (pGNG20). DBS ON on stimulation, DBS OFF off stimulation, 1st first assessment, 2nd second assessment. The asterisk (*) indicates significant difference (p < 0.05)

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APA

Georgiev, D., Dirnberger, G., Wilkinson, L., Limousin, P., & Jahanshahi, M. (2016). In Parkinson’s disease on a probabilistic Go/NoGo task deep brain stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus only interferes with withholding of the most prepotent responses. Experimental Brain Research, 234(4), 1133–1143. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00221-015-4531-2

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