A New Approach For Calming Parkinson's Tremors
Many neuroscientists believe that pathological brain
rhythms, for example in Parkinson's disease and in
epilepsy, arise from an abnormal synchronization
of many thousands of nerve cells (neurons). This physical
mechanism appears in many physical and biological
systems. For example, it enables fireflies to light up in
unison.
Sometimes, synchrony is desirable, for instance,
when the cells of the heart's main pacemaker (the sino-atrial
node) fire all together to stimulate heart contraction.
But in many cases synchrony is harmful. London's
Millennium Bridge, which swayed undesirably shortly after it
opened in 2000, provides a useful example. Hundreds
of pedestrians subconsciously synchronized their pace
to the bridge's sideways, left-to-right swaying
motions. The bridge oscillations, driven by pedestrians, became
dangerously large, and the walkway had to be closed
for reconstruction.
In the case of a Parkinson's tremor one also needs
to suppress the synchronous oscillations of nerve cells, but
one can hardly apply the methods used by engineers
for the Millennium Bridge. Thus, researchers need a
technique to control the collective synchrony of
neurons.
Now, a paper suggests a new approach: one would measure
the collective rhythm of nerve cells and, after
some delay, electrically
"feed back" this rhythm into the population of nerve
cells. Adjusting the delay time and the amplification in the
feedback loop, the researchers in principle could
either suppress or enhance the collective rhythm.
The researchers (Michael Rosenblum and Arkady
Pikovsky, University of Potsdam, Germany) have tested
this idea in simulations that employ mathematical
models of neuron populations.
The researchers believe the scheme might be used,
in particular, for suppressing Parkinson's tremors by means
of the emerging medical technique, called Deep Brain
Stimulation, that enables intervention with the use of
implanted microelectrodes.
In principle, medical doctors could use an implanted
electrode to measure electrical activity of the brain area
and stimulate the nerve-cell population via a second
electrode with the delayed signal. The advantage of this
approach is that individual neurons are not much
affected and continue to function, while the pathological
collective Parkinsonian rhythm is suppressed noninvasively.
(Rosenblum and Pikovsky, Physical Review
Letters, upcoming.)