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Background:
Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is form of non-invasive brain stimulation. It is approved to treat depression. TMS may help decrease drug craving. It is important to understand how TMS affects the brain. Such a better understanding would help to design ways to treat drug addiction.
Objectives:
To learn how TMS affects the brain when it stimulates an area in the front of the brain. Also, to see how the stimulation affects the area stimulated and other connected areas.
Eligibility:
Healthy, right-handed adults ages 18-60 who are non-drug users.
Design:
Participants will be screened under protocol 06-DA-N415.
Participants will have at least 3 visits. The first visit will last about 3 hours. All other visits will last up to 6 hours. Participants cannot use drugs or alcohol at least 24 hours before a visit. They cannot have more than half a cup of a caffeinated drink at least 12 hours before a visit.
Each visit will include a brief medical history update, urine test for drugs and pregnancy (if female), a breath test for alcohol and smoking, and questionnaires.
Participants will have a TMS orientation visit. A wire coil will be placed on the head. An electrical current will pass through the coil to create a magnetic pulse that stimulates the brain.
The other visits will include 2 sessions of TMS-MRI. Participants will lie on a table that slides into a cylinder. The TMS coil and the MRI coil will be placed over the head. Pictures will be taken of the brain with and without stimulation.
Participants will complete a questionnaire about how they feel before and after each TMS session and in a follow-up call 2-3 weeks after their last session.
Full description
Objectives:
The goal of the protocol is to investigate acute modulations of brain activity by transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). Using simultaneous TMS and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we will evaluate TMS induced changes in brain activity, including regional brain activation and inter-regional functional connectivity. Repetitive TMS will be applied over the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) with different frequencies and interleaved with fMRI acquisition to provide online monitoring of brain activity. Furthermore, we will assess the relationship between the TMS induced brain activity and the anatomical connection obtained from diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), using individual variations in these imaging measures. Results from this study will help to understand the underling mechanism of TMS and will provide insights for interpretation of TMS and fMRI data.
Study population:
Up to 70 healthy, adults will be tested. Subjects must fit exclusion/inclusion criteria for both TMS and MRI. We expect to enroll 70 subjects to arrive at 50 who complete the protocol.
Design:
The study is a within-subject design with each subject completing up to 6 TMS-fMRI sessions in three days (2 sessions per day)
Outcome measures:
The outcome measures will be the effects of TMS on fMRI blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) responses, TMS induced changes on resting state functional connectivity, and their associations with relevant structural connectivity revealed by DTI.
Enrollment
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Subjects must:
Be 18 - 60 years of age.
-Justification: Many neural processes change with age, and these changes could introduce unwanted variability in both behavioral and MRI signals. In addition, the risk of difficult-to-detect medical abnormalities such as silent cerebral infarcts increases with age.
--Screening tool: History.
Be in good health.
Right-handed.
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
Personal history of stroke, brain lesions, previous neurosurgery, any personal history of seizure or fainting episode of unknown cause, or head trauma resulting in loss of consciousness, lasting over 30 minutes or with sequela lasting longer than two days.
First-degree family history of any form of epilepsy with a potentially hereditary basis.
Cardiac pacemakers, neural stimulators, implantable defibrillator, implanted medication pumps, intracardiac lines, or acute, unstable cardiac disease, with intracranial implants (e.g. aneurysm clips, -shunts, stimulators, cochlear implants, or electrodes) or any other metal object in the body that precludes either MRI scanning or TMS intervention.
Any contraindications to MRI or TMS.
Noise-induced hearing loss or tinnitus.
Current use (any use in the past 4 weeks, chronic use within 6 past six months) of any investigational drug or of any medications with psychotropic, anti or pro-convulsive action.
Lifetime history of major depressive disorder, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, mania, or hypomania.
Current use of nicotine or history more than about 20 cigarettes or 20 instances of nicotine use in lifetime or history of daily nicotine use.
Meet current DSM-5 criteria for any substance use disorder, smoke daily, or urine toxicology positive for any illicit substance inconsistent with history given.
abuse. Participants who test positive at screening (under the NIDA IRP screening protocol) may be assessed for current intoxication. For participants who are not found to be currently intoxicated, screening staff will assess for SUD and coherence of their drug use history and toxicology with particular attention to substances for which they are positive and may require a return screening visit to demonstrate ability to produce a negative urine before allowing them to proceed to clearance for this study.
Have met DSM-5 criteria for any substance use disorder in the past.
Pregnant individuals or those with reproductive potential who are sexually active and not using an acceptable form of contraception.
Participation in an rTMS session less than two weeks ago.
History of learning disability, current ADHD or cognitive impairment
Non-English Speaking
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
70 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
NIDA IRP Screening Team; Yihong Yang, Ph.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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