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Are there differences in cortical excitability between akinetic-rigid and tremor-dominant subtypes of Parkinson’s disease?

Research Authors
Eman M. Khedra,b,*, Jean-Pascal Lefaucheurc,d, Asmaa M Hasana, Khaled Osamaa
Research Date
Research Year
2021
Research Abstract

Objective: To assess by transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) the excitability of various cortical circuits in akinetic-rigid and tremor-dominant subtypes of Parkinsons disease (PD).
Methods: The study included 92 patients with PD according to UK Brain Bank criteria, with akinetic-rigid (n = 64) or tremor-dominant (n = 28) subtype. Cortical excitability study, including
resting and active motor thresholds (rMT and aMT), input
output curve of motor evoked potentials, contralateral and ipsilateral silent periods (cSP and iSP), short and long-interval intracortical inhibition (SICI and LICI), and intracortical facilitation (ICF) were measured. The results
obtained were compared to a control group of 30 age- and sex-matched healthy subjects.

Results: The patients in the tremor group had significantly lower rMT and aMT compared to controls and akinetic-rigid patients and significantly shorter iSP duration compared to akinetic-rigid
patients, while iSP latency tended to be longer in akinetic-rigid patients compared to controls.
There were no signi
ficant differences between the two PD subgroups regarding other cortical
excitability parameters, including paired-pulse TMS parameters.

Conclusions: Only subtle differences of cortical excitability were found between patients with
akinetic-rigid vs. tremor-dominant subtype of PD.

Significance: The clinical heterogeneity of PD patients probably has an impact on cortical excitability measures, far beyond the akinetic-rigid versus tremor-dominant profile.