Thalamic deep brain stimulation (DBS) has shown clinical improvement for patients with treatment-refractory Tourette Syndrome (TS). Advancing DBS for TS requires identifying reliable electrophysiological markers. Recognising TS as a network disorder, we investigated thalamo-cortical oscillatory connectivity by combining local field potential (LFP) recordings from the DBS thalamic target region using the PerceptTM PC neurostimulator with high-density EEG in eight male TS patients (aged 27–38) while stimulation was off. We identified a spatially and spectrally distinct oscillatory network connecting the medial thalamus and frontal regions in the alpha band (8–12 Hz), with functional connectivity strength negatively correlated with TS symptom severity. Moreover, reduced thalamo-frontal alpha functional connectivity before tic onset, localised in sensorimotor regions and the inferior parietal cortex, suggests its direct role in tic generation. Importantly, associations with symptoms and pre-tic dynamics were specific to functional connectivity patterns and not evident in the pure power spectra. These findings underscore the importance of investigating electrophysiological oscillatory connectivity to characterise pathological network connections in TS, potentially guiding stimulation-based interventions and future research on closed-loop DBS for TS
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