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Clinical Trial

Improving Brain Stimulation Through Imaging

NCT: NCT03851380 · ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING

NCT IDNCT03851380
StatusACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Start Date2019-09-30
Completion2026-05-01

Brief Summary

Repetitive pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) is a noninvasive treatment that involves stimulating the brain; however, treatment benefit depends on placing a TMS coil in the correct place on the head to reach critical brain regions below. Clinicians typically use scalp-based targeting, a process in which rather than using MRI guidance to target brain regions for stimulation, they use landmarks on the scalp. Several researchers, including the investigators' lab, showed that the current scalp-based targeting techniques do not position stimulation above the correct brain region, and patients fail to respond. The investigators propose to improve clinical scalp-based targeting by comparing it to MRI guided targeting. The most common clinical population receiving rTMS therapy is depressed patients. The investigators' plan is to study the accuracy of certain scalp-based rules in patients with depression. Accurate brain stimulation targeting is critical for effective rTMS therapy. For participants who are not undergoing rTMS therapy who have COVID-19 distress, we are offering a combined home-based neuromodulation (transcranial electrical stimulation) and focused psychotherapy program dedicated to improving the same outcome measure, quality of life. Transcranial electrical stimulation (tES) stimulates the brain over a large region; however, we are able to model with brain imaging which brain regions receive the strongest stimulation. Our goal is still to examine stimulation precision, but we will test whether strength of tES in the same brain regions that rTMS is targeting will also lead to improved quality of life. We will also carefully assess whether it is possible to measure healthy functioning, an outcome in the rTMS study, because sheltering in place may reduce activities and thus distort our measure. We will also test whether our psychotherapy intervention will mitigate this effect and, if so, we may make it available to all those depressed Veterans in whom we're studying the effect of neuromodulation on functioning.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Improving Brain Stimulation Through Imaging?

Improving Brain Stimulation Through Imaging is a clinical trial registered under NCT03851380. Current status: ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING.

What is the status of NCT03851380?

The current status of NCT03851380 (Improving Brain Stimulation Through Imaging) is: ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING.

When did Improving Brain Stimulation Through Imaging start?

Improving Brain Stimulation Through Imaging started on 2019-09-30.

Official Source

View on ClinicalTrials.gov →

Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov API. For the most current status, refer to the official record.