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The proposed study will evaluate the safety, durability and efficacy of repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS) as a promising non-invasive therapeutic treatment for improving memory in older adults with mild or moderate Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) who have been experiencing residual memory or cognitive problems that affect daily functioning.
Full description
Recent advances in both AD and TBI test non-pharmaceutical interventions that target chronic symptom improvement (e.g., non- invasive brain stimulation, exercise and cognitive training). In order to provide targeted therapies to patients who suffer from chronic sequela of TBI it is necessary to understand mechanisms of repair within the context of an aging brain. Repetitive TMS (rTMS) delivers therapeutic, noninvasive brain stimulation, is FDA-approved for treatment for major depression and currently used for treatment of pain, PTSD, anxiety, improvement of executive function in mild and moderate TBI, severe TBI, memory enhancement and dementia.
This treatment can induce neuronal long-term potentiation resulting in synaptic repair leading to improvements in memory function through hippocampal- cortical circuits and brain connectivity measured by resting state-fMRI (rs fMRI) particularly in default mode and central executive network (DMN & CEN). The study primarily proposes to assess the efficacy of rTMS to improve memory performance and to test rs-fMRI (i.e. DMN) as a potential biomarker to capture response to treatment in older patients suffering with chronic symptoms related to previous brain injuries (depression, PTSD etc). In addition, the study will assess other established biomarkers longitudinally (e.g.,hypometabolism via PET FDG, cortical oscillation via electroencephalography (EEG), Brain Derived Nerve Growth Factor (BDNF)and hippocampal volume from structural MRI) to capture patient response to treatment that may signal early dementia.
HYPOTHESES:
Primary:
Subjects with TBI who receive active rTMS treatment (rTMS_A) will: a) show significantly greater improvement from baseline in memory performance post rTMS intervention compared to subjects who received sham rTMS treatment (rTMS_S), and b) show stronger functional connectivity within and between DMN and CEN post rTMS intervention compared to patients who received sham (rTMS_S).
Secondary:
SPECIFIC OBJECTIVES:
Primary Objective: a) To assess the efficacy of rTMS to predict improvement in memory performance pre and post rTMS intervention in older patients with TBI, and b) To assess rs-fMRI as a biomarker to detect these changes in memory performance.
Secondary Objective: To assess the mechanism of rTMS in synaptic repair/regeneration by assessment of structure & functional brain activity (PET/MRI, fMRI, & EEG), genetic, cognitive and behavioral function factors (including QOL, depression and PTSD).
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33 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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