Browsing by Author "Meunier, Sabine"
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Item Acute dopamine boost has a negative effect on plasticity of the primary motor cortex in advanced Parkinson's disease(BRAIN, 2012)Plasticity of primary motor cortex is severely impaired in Parkinson's disease and chronic dopaminergic treatment is reported not to rescue it. The effect of an acute dose of levodopa on cortical plasticity reported so far is variable. In this study, it was hypothesized that cortical plasticity would be restored in Parkinson's disease as a long duration response to treatment in stable responders while those with motor complications would have a reduction or loss of plasticity similar to the decay of long duration response of motor signs. Patients were carefully stratified based on their motor response to levodopa into stable responders (n = 17), fluctuating non-dyskinetics (n = 18) and fluctuating dyskinetics (n = 20). Theta burst stimulation was applied to the motor cortex to induce long-term potentiation and long-term depression-like plasticity in both OFF and ON conditions. In OFF, stable responders could express both types of plasticity, fluctuating non-dyskinetics had long-term potentiation, but no long-term depression and both types of plasticity were lost in fluctuating dyskinetics. This suggests the presence of a long duration response in early stages of levodopa treatment and a gradual loss of chronic treatment benefit on plasticity, particularly for long-term depression, when motor complications develop. An acute dose of levodopa led to a worsening of long-term potentiation in fluctuating non-dyskinetic patients, and it did not have any effect on the plasticity that was absent in OFF in the fluctuating dyskinetic patients. Acute dosing led to a worsening of long-term depression in all the groups. In the fluctuating dyskinetic patients, there was a paradoxical potentiation instead of depression. Our results suggest that an acute non-physiological dopamine boost has a negative effect on cortical plasticity as disease advances. We propose that the loss of long duration response and the negative effect of acute doses on cortical plasticity with progression of disease may contribute to the pathophysiology of motor complications. Repeated non-physiological surges in synaptic dopamine during acute levodopa dosing could potentially lead to persistent dysfunction of key enzymes of the intracellular signalling cascade that are involved in the induction and maintenance of both forms of plasticity.Item Early, severe and bilateral loss of LTP and LTD-like plasticity in motor cortex (M1) in de novo Parkinson's disease(CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2012)Objective: To test the plasticity of bilateral motor cortices (M1) in treatment-nave (de novo) Parkinson's disease (PD) patients and its response to single dose of L-DOPA.Methods: Twenty-one de novo PD patients with only unilateral motor symptoms were recruited to eliminate the effects of advanced disease and chronic treatment and were tested with intermittent (n = 10) and continuous theta burst stimulation (iTBS and cTBS) (n = 11) protocols to induce LTP and LTD-like plasticity on both M1 cortices. They were compared with two groups of 10 each, age-matched, healthy volunteers (HV). Severity of motor signs and effectiveness of TBS were measured bilaterally in the untreated state and after a uniform dose of L-DOPA in all patients.Results: iTBS and cTBS induced significant LTP and LTD-like plasticity in M1 of HV. In de novo patients, there was no plasticity in both M1. Acute L-DOPA challenge did not improve plasticity in either M1 cortices, though motor signs of PD improved. There was no correlation of motor signs with M1 plasticity.Conclusion: The early, severe and bilateral loss of plasticity in M1 in de novo PD patients is a primary disease-related cortical dysfunction. The contrasting L-DOPA response of motor signs and M1 plasticity could arise from differences in neural circuits mediating them or differing effects of acute dopamine replacement on circuits recruited by specific plasticity-induction techniques, particularly in treatment nave PD.Significance: M1 plasticity defect occurs early in PD and might affect motor learning. Acute vs. chronic dopamine replacement could have different effects on plasticity in PD or in the networks recruited by a specific plasticity induction technique. (C) 2011 International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology. Published by Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.