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1.
Heliyon ; 9(10): e20625, 2023 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37829809

ABSTRACT

While resting state electroencephalography (EEG) provides relevant information on pathological changes in Parkinson's disease, most studies focus on the eyes-closed EEG biomarkers. Recent evidence has shown that both eyes-open EEG and reactivity to eyes-opening can also differentiate Parkinson's disease from healthy aging, but no consensus has been reached on a discriminatory capability benchmark. The aim of this study was to determine the resting-state EEG biomarkers suitable for real-time application that can differentiate Parkinson's patients from healthy subjects under both eyes closed and open. For this, we analysed and compared the quantitative EEG analyses of 13 early-stage cognitively normal Parkinson's patients with an age and sex-matched healthy group. We found that Parkinson's disease exhibited abnormal excessive theta activity in eyes-closed, which was reflected by a significantly higher relative theta power, a higher time percentage with a frequency peak in the theta band and a reduced alpha/theta ratio, while Parkinson's patients showed a significantly steeper non-oscillatory spectral slope activity than that of healthy subjects. We also found considerably less alpha and beta reactivity to eyes-opening in Parkinson's disease plus a significant moderate correlation between these EEG-biomarkers and the MDS-UPDRS score, used to assesses the clinical symptoms of Parkinson's Disease. Both EEG recordings with the eyes open and reactivity to eyes-opening provided additional information to the eyes-closed condition. We thus strongly recommend that both eyes open and closed be used in clinical practice recording protocols to promote EEG as a complementary non-invasive screening method for the early detection of Parkinson's disease, which would allow clinicians to design patient-oriented treatment and improve the patient's quality of life.

2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21097286

ABSTRACT

Two new surrogate methods, the Small Shuffle Surrogate (SSS) and the Truncated Fourier Transform Surrogate (TFTS), have been proposed to study whether there are some kind of dynamics in irregular fluctuations and if so whether these dynamics are linear or not, even if this fluctuations are modulated by long term trends. This situation is theoretically incompatible with the assumption underlying previously proposed surrogate methods. We apply the SSS and TFTS methods to microelectrode recording (MER) signals from different brain areas, in order to acquire a deeper understanding of them. Through our methodology we conclude that the irregular fluctuations in MER signals possess some determinism.


Subject(s)
Microelectrodes , Algorithms , Fourier Analysis
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