APS Logo

Stimulation-induced long-lasting desynchronization of plastic neuronal networks

ORAL

Abstract

Abnormal neuronal synchrony is a hallmark of Parkinson’s disease (PD). Deep brain stimulation is an established treatment; however, symptoms return shortly after stimulation ceases. Utilizing synaptic plasticity, theory-based approaches, such as coordinated reset stimulation (CRS), induce long-lasting effects by reshaping synaptic connectivity to stabilize desynchronized activity after stimulation ceases. Animal and clinical studies demonstrated corresponding long-lasting therapeutic effects.

 

We study CRS in networks of leaky integrate-and-fire neurons with spike-timing-dependent plasticity using theoretical analysis and computer simulations. We find that CRS-induced synaptic reshaping is affected by the statistics of neuronal responses to individual stimuli and their spatio-temporal pattern [1,2]. Randomization of CRS patterns improves the parameter robustness of resulting long-lasting effects [1,3]. We hypothesize that randomized stimulus patterns may improve the parameter robustness of long-lasting therapeutic effects of brain stimulation in PD and facilitate parameter adjustment procedures in future clinical applications. 

Publication: [1] JAK and PAT, PRResearch 2, 033101 (2020); [2] JAK, AKN and PAT, Chaos 30, 083134 (2020); [3] AKN, JAK, and PAT, Front. Physiol. 12, 719680 (2021)

Presenters

  • Justus A Kromer

    Stanford University

Authors

  • Justus A Kromer

    Stanford University

  • Ali Khaledi-Nasab

    Stanford University

  • Peter A Tass

    Stanford University