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Movement disorders are common neurological disorders, characterized by either excess or paucity of movements. Essential tremor (ET) is one of the most common of these disorders, defined as chronic, rhythmic involuntary movements (tremor) that occur primarily during action involving the upper extremities as prominent body site. ET occurs in between 0.4% and 4% of adults below age 60, its prevalence and related impairment of routine daily actions increasing dramatically with age. More than half of patients do not regain functional independence with medications. These patients are offered functional neurosurgical approaches that carry procedural risk or adverse effects secondary to deep electric stimulation of surgical lesioning. Hence, there is a substantial need for alternative, non-invasive therapeutic options for this disabling neurological disorder. Recently, non-invasive neuromodulation applied as transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS), has emerged as promising for tremor control. In healthy subjects, tACS applied with a high definition (or focused) montage to the primary motor cortex (M1), was found to entrain physiological tremor; in patients with Parkinson's disease, tACS could decrease the amplitude of rest tremor when the stimulation was delivered in phase with, and at the same frequency of, the tremor. Tremor in ET could also be entrained applying ACS to the arm skin's peripheral nerves (transcutaneous ACS), but its effect on tremor amplitude is unknown.
METHODS AND POTENTIAL CONTRIBUTION/IMPACT OF THE RESEARCH.
The proposed project aims to explore the whole potential of tACS for the tremor suppression in ET. The investigators aim to test the following hypotheses:
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This investigation will collect preliminary data on the efficacy of real vs. sham, as well as unlocked vs. phase-locked, modalities of tACS and transcutaneous ACS on tremor amplitude in 25 patients with ET.
Comparing transcranial and transcutaneous, as well as unlocked and phase-locked, modalities represents the novelty of our approach. This has the potential to generate a wealth of preliminary data forming the basis of a large, randomized controlled trial of multiple sessions of this intervention, hence potentially capable of producing long-lasting effects, in this common and disabling disorder. Given its non-invasiveness and relatively low cost, this approach has, if effective, a huge therapeutic potential in ET.
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30 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Elaheh NosratMirshekarlou, MSc
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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