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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jul 12, 2026

Implantation of Osmotic Pumps and Induction of Stress to Establish a Symptomatic, Pharmacological Mouse Model for DYT/PARK-ATP1A3 Dystonia
10:41

Implantation of Osmotic Pumps and Induction of Stress to Establish a Symptomatic, Pharmacological Mouse Model for DYT/PARK-ATP1A3 Dystonia

Published on: September 12, 2020

Brain network pathophysiology in dystonia.

David A Peterson1,2, Myungjoo Kim1, Robert Chen3

  • 1Institute for Neural Computation, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA, United States.

Dystonia (Lausanne, Switzerland)
|July 10, 2026
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Dystonia is a brain network disorder. This review shows shared network dysfunction across dystonia types, guiding personalized neuromodulation and therapies.

Keywords:
DBSMRIPETbrain networksdystonia

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Measurement & Analysis of the Temporal Discrimination Threshold Applied to Cervical Dystonia
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Measurement & Analysis of the Temporal Discrimination Threshold Applied to Cervical Dystonia

Published on: January 27, 2018

Related Experiment Videos

Last Updated: Jul 12, 2026

Implantation of Osmotic Pumps and Induction of Stress to Establish a Symptomatic, Pharmacological Mouse Model for DYT/PARK-ATP1A3 Dystonia
10:41

Implantation of Osmotic Pumps and Induction of Stress to Establish a Symptomatic, Pharmacological Mouse Model for DYT/PARK-ATP1A3 Dystonia

Published on: September 12, 2020

Measurement & Analysis of the Temporal Discrimination Threshold Applied to Cervical Dystonia
10:05

Measurement & Analysis of the Temporal Discrimination Threshold Applied to Cervical Dystonia

Published on: January 27, 2018

Area of Science:

  • Neuroscience
  • Neurology
  • Systems Neuroscience

Background:

  • Dystonia is increasingly understood as a disorder affecting brain networks.
  • Characterizing the network-level pathophysiology is crucial for understanding dystonia.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To integrate multimodal evidence from human studies to characterize the network-level pathophysiology of dystonia.
  • To highlight the importance of network dysfunction in dystonia and inform targeted interventions.

Main Methods:

  • Structural MRI (voxel-based morphometry, diffusion imaging)
  • Functional imaging (PET, fMRI, EEG, MEG, fNIRS)
  • Invasive electrophysiology (deep brain stimulation recordings)
  • Non-invasive brain stimulation (TMS, TES, TUS)
  • Computational modeling (The Virtual Brain)

Main Results:

  • Alterations in gray matter volume and white matter connectivity in sensorimotor cortex, basal ganglia, cerebellum, and thalamus.
  • Aberrant activity and connectivity in cortico-striato-pallido-thalamocortical and cerebello-thalamocortical loops.
  • Shared network dysfunction patterns across dystonia subtypes, with distinct topographical and circuit-level alterations.

Conclusions:

  • Network dysfunction is central to dystonia pathophysiology.
  • A network perspective guides development of targeted diagnostics and therapies, including neuromodulation.
  • Advancing multimodal and integrative methods is key for precision interventions in dystonia.