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Therapeutic repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) for depression is well-supported, with multiple protocols approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration and global efforts aimed at boosting its antidepressant effects underway. However, there exists an under-reported aspect of clinical trials using rTMS: what are patients doing during each stimulation session? Here, the investigators begin this investigation with individuals without a history of depression nor other psychiatric diagnosis. The investigators focus on the underlying brain activity. The investigators will systematically assess the modulatory role of brain state on the brain's response to a session of rTMS by using a concurrent, non-invasive brain imaging setting: functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS), marking the first effort of its kind in this field.
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The scientific literature on rTMS rehabilitation is steadily growing and new treatment protocols that aim to optimize rehabilitation efficacy as well as efficiency are emerging. However, no consideration to what patients should be doing during rTMS treatment sessions is given. These details are typically omitted in the literature, and advice is not given in recent guidelines. When details are reported, patients are assumed to enter a relaxed state during treatment. This assumption is highly problematic, especially for MDD because depression is an internalizing disorder, wherein emotional and cognitive dyscontrol are major features linked with abnormal activity of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), the region being stimulated. Indeed, instructing patients to concentrate on thoughts that exacerbate their depressive symptoms during stimulation diminishes the antidepressant treatment effect, and cognitive neuroscience research suggests the importance of considering the initial brain state when conducting behavioral and neuroimaging experiments with TMS. Attention to what occurs during stimulation is highly relevant but usually omitted in neuropsychiatric rehabilitation research. This proposal is a systematic assessment of the modulatory role of brain state on the prefrontal response to rTMS in healthy participants. Results from this study will inform whether the clinical literature on therapeutic rTMS is mistaken for not controlling for brain state, and provide proof-of-concept for future clinical trials and collaborative research proposals (CRF) for the treatment of neuropsychiatric disorders.
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36 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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