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The vagus nerve is one of the main components of the parasympathetic nervous system, which oversees a wide variety of important bodily functions, including mood control, immune response, digestion, and heart rate. It is the tenth cranial nerve originating from the medulla oblongata in the central nervous system and is the longest cranial nerve. It starts from the medulla and progresses to the colon. It mainly innervates the thoracic and abdominal organs. It has an obvious effect on the autonomic nervous system, especially on parasympathetic activity. When the literature is examined, it has been proven by various studies that vagus nerve stimulation has effects on the regulation of the autonomic system. Vagus nerve stimulation with different methods has been investigated over the years and the effectiveness of several different methods has been proven. There are both invasive and non-invasive (transcutaneous) techniques for vagus nerve stimulation. The first experiments were developed on invasive applications, and then non-invasive applications began to emerge.
Today, the most used devices and stimulation models were approved by the FDA in the 1990s for use in patients with drug-resistant epilepsy. In the middle of the first decade of the 2000s, the FDA approved the use of these devices for drug-resistant depression. These application methods have therapeutic effects for a wide variety of conditions, including heart failure, obesity, migraine, Alzheimer's, inflammation, chronic pain, and tinnitus. Invasive intervention is not necessary to perform this procedure. Direct stimulation of afferent nerve fibers in the ear can produce a similar effect without surgical intervention. Non-invasive vagus nerve stimulation may affect human physiology and be a simple and inexpensive alternative to invasive vagus stimulation. It has been shown on different subjects that non-invasive stimulation of the tragus in the ear increases the activation in the parasympathetic system and decreases the sympathetic activity. This indicates that tragus stimulation may be a viable treatment for some disorders in which autonomic activity is compromised.
While the general mechanism has been explained in this way, there is no definite information in the literature about which ear from the right single ear, double ear or left single ear will be applied in Transcutaneous Auricular Vagus Nerve Stimulation applications. While specifying the application techniques, an objective scientific study about whether there is a difference between Unilateral Right, Unilateral Left and Bilateral Applications or which of them gives more effective results will be a guide for further studies. The purpose of the study, planning to carry out is to seek an answer to one of the questions that come to mind for standardization. The main question we seek to answer is whether there is a difference between Unilateral Right, Unilateral Left and Bilateral Applications while specifying the application techniques, or which of them gives more effective results. This studies main goal is to set up this study in order to seek answers about which application style will produce results and to provide a guide for further studies.
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90 participants in 6 patient groups
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Berkay Eren E. PEHLIVANOGLU, MSc, PhD(c)
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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