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Characterizing the Neural Bases of Motivational Disorders After Stroke (MOTI-stroke)

I

Institut National de la Santé Et de la Recherche Médicale, France

Status

Completed

Conditions

Stroke

Treatments

Diagnostic Test: Motivation tests

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03741140
C17-19
2018-A00511-54 / 1 (Registry Identifier)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The aim of the study is to quantify elementary mechanisms of motivation, with innovative tools adapted to clinical settings, in healthy subjects, and in stroke patients. The secondary aim of the study is to investigate the neural substrates of motivational mechanisms, and to study the impact of lesions in the grey and the white matter, the influence of lesion site.

Full description

Disorders of motivation, such as apathy, are among the most prevalent symptoms in neuropsychiatric disorders and during chronic diseases. They have a major impact on patients' physical activity and lifestyle, and on their involvement in their own care. They affect a wide range of morbidity outcomes, alter functional recovery in rehabilitation, impair long-term disability, and prevent patients from returning to an active and independent life. Yet, the neural bases of motivational deficits remain largely unknown. Current diagnostic tools are sparse and cannot distinguish between distinct mechanisms responsible for apathetic syndromes. Besides, current treatments remain extremely limited. However, recent advances in the field of neuroeconomics - the science of decision-making - have provided concept and tools to study the neurobiological bases of elementary cognitive processes underlying motivated behaviors. These theories suggest that the brain implements optimization processes that determine our behaviors by minimizing the cost of our actions while maximizing their expected benefits. The adaptation of tools developed for basic research now enables the assessment of these cognitive mechanisms.

Elementary deficits of motivation will be assessed with a phenotyping battery of motivation tests in 20 healthy subjects (up to 10 healthy subjects can be replaced), 20 patients (up to 10 patients can be replaced) with a stroke in the medial prefrontal cortex, and 20 patients (up to 10 patients can be replaced) with a stroke in the insula. This battery will allow us to characterize, at the patient's level, elementary processes such as the encoding of goal values or effort costs, the modulation of cost with fatigue, and the resolution of cost-benefit trade-offs. Symptom-Lesion mapping studies and voxel-based morphometry studies will be performed using whole brain MRI measures of structural integrity.

Enrollment

66 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria (healthy volunteers):

  • Right-handed
  • Age > 18 years old
  • Able to squeeze a hand-grip
  • Signature of consent form
  • Affiliation to an Health Insurance Scheme or beneficiary of such a scheme

Inclusion Criteria (patients):

  • Age > 18 years old
  • Able to squeeze a hand-grip
  • Signature of consent form
  • Affiliation to an Health Insurance Scheme or beneficiary of such a scheme
  • Stroke of the medial frontal lobe and not affecting the lateral frontal lobe OR stroke of the lateral frontal lobe and not affecting the medial frontal lobe

Exclusion Criteria (healthy volunteers):

  • Under justice protection
  • History of neurological or psychiatric diseases
  • Evolving disease that could impede volunteer participation during the whole study
  • Ongoing psychotropic drug or stopped for less than 3 weeks
  • Treatment that could interfere with subject performance
  • Chronical use of illicit psychoactive drugs or the day of the exam
  • Pregnant, parturient or breastfeeding woman
  • Exclusion period of another research
  • Contra-indication to MRI scan
  • Comprehension difficulties or difficulties to perform the study cognitive tests

Exclusion Criteria (patients):

  • Under justice protection
  • Evolving disease that could impede volunteer participation during the whole study
  • Chronical use of illicit psychoactive drugs or the day of the exam
  • Pregnant, parturient or breastfeeding woman
  • Exclusion period of another research
  • Contra-indication to MRI scan
  • Comprehension difficulties or difficulties to perform the study cognitive tests
  • Brain sequela with important cognitive deficiencies preventing cognitive test interpretation according to the investigator

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

66 participants in 3 patient groups

medial frontal stroke
Other group
Description:
20 patients (up to 10 patients can be replaced) with a stroke in the medial frontal lobe will be included in this arm, and will undergo motivation phenotyping.
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: Motivation tests
lateral frontal stroke
Other group
Description:
20 patients (up to 10 patients can be replaced) with a stroke in the lateral frontal lobe will be included in this arm, and will undergo motivation phenotyping.
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: Motivation tests
Healthy participants
Other group
Description:
20 healthy participants (up to 10 healthy participants can be replaced) will be included in this arm, and will undergo motivation phenotyping.
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: Motivation tests

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Raphael Le Bouc, PD, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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