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Investigating Cerebellar Inhibition and Its Clinical Significance in Parkinsonian Tremor and Intention Tremor

Conditions
Tremor
Interventions
Diagnostic Test: Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation
Registration Number
NCT05512299
Lead Sponsor
China Medical University Hospital
Brief Summary

Cerebellocerebral connection plays an important function in motor control. Nowadays it can be investigated with neuroimaging and physiological methods in humans. Cerebellar inhibition (CBI) is a phenomenon showing a physiological suppression of the motor evoked potential (MEP) evoked from the motor cortex (M1) by delivering a preceding transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) on the contralateral cerebellum. Despite the mediated pathway is supposed to be the cerebello-dentato-thalamo-cortical (CDTC) circuit, there is no conclusive evidence. In addition, the clinical significant of CBI remains unclear. Based on our previous studies, we found that the patients with advanced tremor show an impaired Bereitschaftspotential. The findings support a notion that the patients with tremor bear dysfunction of the CDTC circuit. Intriguingly, the pathogenesis of the parkinsonian tremor is highly associated with the CDTC circuit. The "dimmer-switch" model suggests that the basal ganglia-thalamo-cortical circuit dysfunction may initiate the resting tremor, and the following CDTC circuit dysfunction will lead to the large-amplitude resting and postural tremor in Parkinson's disease (PD). The intention tremor is usually found in the patients with cerebellar degeneration, which is also relevant to the CDTC circuit dysfunction. We expect that the clinical significance of CBI and the mediated pathway of CBI will be clarified by this study.

Detailed Description

The patients with hereditary cerebellar degeneration usually present intention tremor. Whether the intention tremor and the other cerebellar signs are correlated with their CBI finding remains unclear. By measuring the excitability curve (or input-output curve) of the CBI, we will be able to clarify this issue.

We will first examine the relationship between CBI and clinical manifestations, particularly the different tremor types. Any CBI change following the PTT intervention in the PD patients will provide an excellent opportunity to investigate the relevance of the basal ganglia-thalamo-cortical circuit with CBI. The DTI findings will provide additional support to our hypothesis.

In the first part of the study, we will recruit twenty age-matched patients into the three groups: PD with pure resting tremor, PD with postural tremor and cerebellar degeneration with intention tremor. They will receive clinical assessments, deep phenotyping with eye tracking, tremor recording and gait analysis. Diffusion tensor imaging focusing on pallidothalamic and dentatothalamic tractography will be done. The excitability curve of CBI will be examined with five TMS intensity steps. We suppose that there will be a gradient correlation of the CBI with the three tremor groups and the two diffusion tensor imaging tracts. In the second part of the study, we will follow up the PD patients who receive the pallidothalamic tractotomy via magnetic resonance imaging-guided focus ultrasound (MRg-FUS). Twelve PD patients with pure resting tremor and twelve PD patients with postural tremor will be monitored for one year. The pallidothalamic tractotomy provides an excellent opportunity to verify our findings in the first part. We suppose that the CBI change will occur in the patients with postural tremor instead of those with pure resting tremor. In summary, we expect that the clinical significance of CBI and the mediated pathway of CBI will be clarified by this study.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
84
Inclusion Criteria

Patients meet the diagnosis of PD with resting/postural or cerebellar degeneration with intention tremor based on the established consensus criteria.

Exclusion Criteria
  1. Patients with contraindication to TMS or MRI examination.
  2. Impairment of cognition that leads unable to fully cooperate with the oral commands during examinations.
  3. Functional III or above congestive heart failure, or cancer with distant metastasis.

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Cerebellar degeneration with intention tremorTranscranial Magnetic StimulationCerebellar degeneration patient with intention tremor.
PD with resting tremorTranscranial Magnetic StimulationParkinson's disease patient with pure resting tremor.
PD with postural tremorTranscranial Magnetic StimulationParkinson's disease patient with postural tremor.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change from baseline cerebellar inhibition (CBI) input output curvebaseline (before the MRgFUS), 1-day, 24-weeks and 48-weeks after the MRgFUS

The CBI is recorded with two different TMS coils. The figure-of-eight coil (2X90 mm) is used for the motor cortex stimulation and the double cone coil (2X126 mm) is used for the cerebellar stimulation. The target recording muscle is first dorsal interosseous (FDI). The TMS intensity used to induce an average MEP amplitude of 0.5 mV is also determined. CBI is measured by a paired TMS with an inter-stimulus interval of 6 ms. That is, the test TMS at M1 is delivered 6 ms following the conditional TMS at contralateral cerebellum.

There are five TMS intensities used for the conditional cerebellar stimulation: 80%, 90%, 100%, 110% and 120% inion active motor threshold. Ten trials are recorded for each TMS intensity with a pseudorandomized order. The interval between two cerebellum-M1 TMS pairs is 8-seconds with 25% variability (i.e. 6-10 s) to reduce the prediction bias.

Change from baseline functional magnetic resonance imagingbaseline (before the MRgFUS), 48-weeks after the MRgFUS

In this study we mainly adopt diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) to quantify two interested projections: the pallidothalamic pathway and the dentatothalamic pathway.

Diffusion tensor imaging of fifty gradient directions is acquired with five non-gradient (B0) images. The B-value is 1500 s/mm2, FOV = 240mm x 240mm, image matrix = 96 x 96, slice thickness = 2.5mm with zero gap. The voxel size is 2.5 x 2.5 x 2.5 mm3 isotopically. The TR was approximately 10000ms which is adjusted to match the slice number of requirements. Image acquired with axial direction, 56 slices to cover the whole brain.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change from baseline clinical evaluationsbaseline (before the MRgFUS), 1-day, 24-weeks and 48-weeks after the MRgFUS

In addition to a detailed history and neurological examinations, the clinical assessment also includes International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society-sponsored UPDRS (MDS-UPDRS) and clinical rating scale for tremor (CRST)for the PD patients. The Scale for the Assessment and Rating of Ataxia (SARA) and CRST are adopted for the patients with cerebellar degeneration.

Change from baseline gait analysisbaseline (before the MRgFUS), 1-day, 24-weeks and 48-weeks after the MRgFUS

The gait analysis system (Zeno Walkway System with PKMAS) provides detailed gait parameters including velocity, cadence, pressure and cyclogram.

Variables in gait analysis: 1.Gait initiation, 2.Level walking, 3.Gait termination.

Change from baseline surface electromyography and eye-tracking patternbaseline (before the MRgFUS), 1-day, 24-weeks and 48-weeks after the MRgFUS

The pattern of eye-tracking and surface electromyography (SEMG) with accelerometer will be recorded to monitor the therapy outcome. The eye-tracking system (EyeLink 1000 Plus) will track eye movements regarding the target fixation, saccade, smooth pursuit and image stimuli. The multiple SEMG recording (CED Power1401) will focus on the arm and hand muscles relevant to the tremor (e.g. first dorsal interosseous, abductor pollicis brevis, extensor carpi radialis and flexor carpi radialis). The accelerometer can also reveal the mechanical information of the tremor oscillation.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Department of Neurology, China Medical University Hospital

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Taichung, Taiwan

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