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This investigation will explore the impact of 8 weeks of citicoline treatment on cognitive function, clinical state and substance use in 40 individuals with mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI).
Full description
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) remains a major cause of death and disability within the United States. Approximately 1.4 million individuals sustain a TBI each year, and currently, more than 5.3 million Americans or 3% of the general population live with disabilities associated with a TBI, resulting in enormous financial, physical and psychosocial burdens to the patients, their families and society. The issue of TBI has never been more salient, as it is now labeled the "signature wound" of the current conflict in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Patients with mTBI often experience a variety of symptoms including headache, dizziness, fatigue, irritability, depression, anxiety, insomnia, reduced alcohol tolerance, and problems with cognitive function. In acute stages, cognitive deficits may affect multiple domains and be severe enough to interfere with everyday activities.
The proposed investigation will explore the impact of 8 weeks of citicoline treatment on cognitive function, clinical state and substance use in 40 individuals with mTBI. The investigators hypothesize that individuals with mTBI who receive citicoline will demonstrate improvements in cognitive performance relative to their own pre-treatment levels as well as to those randomized to placebo. Specifically, the investigators expect the greatest improvement on frontal/executive measures following treatment with citicoline. In addition, the investigators also hypothesize that 8 weeks of treatment with citicoline will result in a reduction of comorbid substance use and improvements in clinical state measures relative to both pre-treatment levels and those randomized to receive placebo. Given the relationship between cognitive function and clinical state, the investigators expect a primary improvement in cognitive function will likely precede the expected improvement of mTBI-related symptoms.
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Exclusion criteria
Additional MR Imaging Exclusion Criteria:
Presence of a medical condition known to affect MR BOLD imaging (i.e. metabolism disorders, eating disorders, hormonal dysregulation, etc)
Uncorrectable poor vision, as subjects must have normal or corrected-to normal vision for viewing of cognitive challenge paradigms during fMRI protocols
Claustrophobia or metal implanted within the body, including body piercings which are not removable
Additional MR related contraindications:
Since some will be military veterans with combat experience and may have been exposed to shrapnel, they will be screened with a handheld metal detector to ensure that they do not have any metal embedded in their body. Subjects who do not pass the metal detector screen and subjects with known shrapnel or other metal embedded or implanted in their body will not be eligible to participate in the MRI portion of this study.
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0 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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