Shared pathway-specific network mechanisms of dopamine and deep brain stimulation for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease.

Publication date: Apr 15, 2025

Deep brain stimulation is a brain circuit intervention that can modulate distinct neural pathways for the alleviation of neurological symptoms in patients with brain disorders. In Parkinson’s disease, subthalamic deep brain stimulation clinically mimics the effect of dopaminergic drug treatment, but the shared pathway mechanisms on cortex – basal ganglia networks are unknown. To address this critical knowledge gap, we combined fully invasive neural multisite recordings in patients undergoing deep brain stimulation surgery with normative MRI-based whole-brain connectomics. Our findings demonstrate that dopamine and stimulation exert distinct mesoscale effects through modulation of local neural population activity. In contrast, at the macroscale, stimulation mimics dopamine in its suppression of excessive interregional network synchrony associated with indirect and hyperdirect cortex – basal ganglia pathways. Our results provide a better understanding of the circuit mechanisms of dopamine and deep brain stimulation, laying the foundation for advanced closed-loop neurostimulation therapies.

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Concepts Keywords
Connectomics Aged
Deep Basal Ganglia
Mri Brain
Neurostimulation Connectome
Parkinson Deep Brain Stimulation
Dopamine
Dopamine
Female
Humans
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Middle Aged
Nerve Net
Neural Pathways
Parkinson Disease
Subthalamic Nucleus

Semantics

Type Source Name
drug DRUGBANK Dopamine
disease MESH Parkinson’s disease
disease MESH brain disorders
drug DRUGBANK Tropicamide
disease MESH Gerd
drug DRUGBANK Levodopa
drug DRUGBANK Albendazole
disease MESH causality
pathway KEGG Parkinson disease

Original Article

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