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Pilot Study of Vagal Stimulation in Chronic Low Back Pain (VALOM)

University Hospital Center (CHU) logo

University Hospital Center (CHU)

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Low Back Pain

Treatments

Device: use of an auricular electrode

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05639270
RECHMPL21_0598

Details and patient eligibility

About

Low back pain is a major public health problem. It is the leading cause of disability in the world. The factors that lead to chronicity of low back pain are multi-factorial and are essentially represented by psychosocial factors (catastrophism, kinesiophobia, algophobia job dissatisfaction, emotional problems such as depression, anxiety, stress, injustice, etc.).

Pain is a multimodal experience that involves different brain structures that are activated by the pain signal and involve the autonomic nervous system (ANS). The vagus nerve is the main actor of one of the two branches of the ANS, the parasympathetic system, which acts as a "slow-down".

The vagus nerve participates in the inter-neuronal transmission of key neurotransmitters for mood, alertness, attention and motivation.

Vagal stimulation has been used for many years as an analgesic device in chronic pain (vascular pain (facial vascular pain, fibromyalgia, visceral pain, gastrointestinal and pelvic pain...)

To date, no study has been conducted on the value of vagal stimulation in chronic low back pain.

Full description

Low back pain is a major public health problem. It is the leading cause of disability in the world.

The factors that lead to chronicity of low back pain are multifactorial, which explains the modest effectiveness of both drug treatments and multidisciplinary programs (analgesic drug interventions, non-pharmacological interventions with rehabilitation, physical exercise, psychotherapy, spinal ergonomics, meditation, yoga, etc.) in the treatment of low back pain. psychotherapy, spinal ergonomics, meditation, yoga...) in chronic forms. These factors of chronicization are essentially represented by psychosocial factors (catastrophism, kinesiophobia, algophobia, job dissatisfaction, emotional problems such as depression, anxiety stress, injustice...)

In the chronic low back pain population, pain is a multimodal experience that involves different brain structures (insula, anterior cingulate cortex, amygdala and prefrontal cortex). These structures are activated by the pain signal and involve the autonomic nervous system (ANS).

The vagus nerve is the main actor of one of the two branches of the ANS, the parasympathetic system, which acts as a "slow-down".

The vagus nerve is involved in the inter-neuronal transmission of key neurotransmitters for mood, alertness, attention and motivation (serotonin, dopamine, oxytocin and noradrenaline).

It is one of the longest nerves in the human body, originating from the base of the brain (nucleus tractus solitarius) and innervating most of the organs (heart, lung, stomach, liver, spleen, kidneys, gallbladder, pancreas, intestines). It allows the integration of information from the periphery (pain, stress, emotions), slows down the heart rate after a stress, reduces the caliber of the bronchial tubes to help breathing, reduces the inflammatory response, participates in digestion and in the communication with the digestive microbiota.

Indeed, there seems to be an alteration of the vagal function in chronic pain patients patients: the vagus nerve is involved in the modulation of pain at different levels (medullary, cerebral) (medullary, cerebral) but also on the different components of pain (sensory, affective emotional, behavioral).

The benefit of the stimulation of the vagus would be mediated by a modulation of afferent information (stress, pain, emotion) associated with a benefit of "relaxation" conveyed by the efferent fibers (cardiac, pulmonary effect...).

This stimulation of the vagus nerve is done through an atrial electrode that stimulates the atrial branch of the vagus nerve.

To date, no study has been conducted on the value of vagal stimulation in chronic low back pain.

Because of the multifactorial mechanisms involved in this pathology, this type of therapy appears to be a useful complement to the management of our patients.

This pilot study will allow us to evaluate the feasibility of a larger study with a placebo arm.

The evaluation of tolerance and adherence to this therapy will be taken into account.

Enrollment

30 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Low back pain with a VAS greater than or equal to 40 that has been ongoing for more than 3 months
  • Failed or insufficiently relieved by private physiotherapy
  • Failed or insufficiently relieved or intolerant of level II analgesics
  • No change in therapy envisaged within one month.

Exclusion criteria

  • Non-common low back pain will not be accepted (presence of red flags).
  • Auricular canal not adapted to the stimulation device.
  • Use of another type of electrical device (pacemaker or TENS).
  • History of vagotomy.
  • Heart rhythm disorder.
  • Presence of a cochlear implant on the stimulation side
  • Pregnancy in progress or planned during the study period
  • Adult protected by law or patient under guardianship or curator
  • Person unable to give consent.
  • Participation in other ongoing biomedical research
  • Absence of express informed consent after a reflection period
  • Not being affiliated to a French social security system or being a beneficiary of such a system

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

30 participants in 1 patient group

low back pain
Experimental group
Description:
The experimental intervention consists of vagal stimulation using the Tens Eco device with an auricular electrode and conductive gel. The stimulation will have an intensity of 25 Hz, lasting 30 minutes, once a day, for 3 months. An evaluation of the pain will be done every week by phone for the first month and then in consultation at one month and at 3 months.
Treatment:
Device: use of an auricular electrode

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Isabel TAVARES, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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