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About
The purpose of this study is to see if stimulation of the brain can improve memory. The investigators will use a device called transcranial magnetic stimulation that can stimulate and activate a specific part of the brain that is important for memory. The study will enroll MCI subjects and subjects with subjective memory complaints who will be randomly assigned to receive active or sham brain stimulation. 'Blinded' or 'sham-controlled' means that the subject will not know whether the treatment they receive is the active treatment or the non-active stimulation. In the 'sham' condition, the stimulator will turn on but will not actually be stimulating the target brain region.
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Inclusion criteria
Screening diagnostic criteria for aMCI will be subjective memory complaints, intact instrumental and basic activities of daily living (Smith et al., 1996), PHQ, MMSE, BVMT-R (25-minute delay), CVLT-II (20-minute delay), Rey-Osterrieth Complex Figure Task (30-minute delay). Baseline assessments will include neuropsychological testing of all study subjects.
Exclusion criteria
Unwilling or unable to provide informed consent
Diagnosis of dementia
Active major medical, psychiatric, or neurologic disorder associated with neurocognitive impairment
History of alcohol or substance abuse
Recent (< 6 months) alcohol or substance abuse (excluding nicotine or caffeine)
History of stroke (if the stroke in our judgment is related to the memory problem), traumatic brain injury with loss of consciousness, or other neurologic disorder (e.g., epilepsy, Huntington's disease, Parkinson's disease)
Non-English speaking participants
Not right handed based on self-report or evaluation based on a standard report
Has received TMS before (not TMS naïve)
Poorly controlled hypertension or cardiovascular disease
Current enrollment in a memory-enhancement study or course
Contraindication to TMS or MRI including claustrophobia, metal in body, surgery within 60 days, certain implants, or previous abnormal MRI results.
scanning facial tattoos is okay if safe with MRI
is taking:
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Interventional model
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70 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Sonja Hiller
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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