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Transcranial Electrical Polarization to Treat Focal Hand Dystonia

National Institutes of Health (NIH) logo

National Institutes of Health (NIH)

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 2

Conditions

FHD
Dystonia
Focal Hand Dystonia

Treatments

Procedure: Transcranial Electrical Polarization (TEP)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

NIH

Identifiers

NCT00106782
050122
05-N-0122

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study will evaluate the effect of transcranial electrical polarization (TEP), also called direct current (DC) stimulation, on focal hand dystonia in people with writer's cramp. In dystonia, muscle spasms cause uncontrolled twisting and repetitive movement or abnormal postures. Focal dystonia involves just one part of the body, such as the hand, neck or face. When people with focal hand dystonia make small and repeated movements with their hands, there is extra activity in the part of the brain called the motor cortex. TEP is a method of brain stimulation that slows down the activity of the nerve cells in the motor cortex. This study may help researchers develop new ways to treat focal hand dystonia.

People 18 years of age and older with focal hand dystonia may be eligible for this study. Participants have a neurological examination and are randomly assigned to one of two treatment groups: TEP or placebo stimulation. The TEP group receives stimulation to the parts of the brain used for hand movement, and the placebo group receives sham stimulation, which does not affect any area of the brain. There are three TEP/placebo sessions over a period of 7 to 10 days. The first session may last up to 2-1/2 hours; the other two sessions last 1-2 hours.

For TEP, sponge electrodes are placed on the scalp and an electrical current is passed through the scalp and skull to the outer part of brain. Before and after each session, participants have a neurological examination, including an evaluation of the rate and severity of their movement problems. For this assessment, participants do a writing test while the electrical activity of their hand muscles is recorded using surface electromyography (EMG). For EMG, small metal disks (electrodes) filled with a conductive gel are taped to the skin over the muscles being tested.

Patients are followed in the clinic the day after the end of TEP treatment for evaluation of their movement abilities and the effects of therapy, such as improvement of handwriting.

Full description

Objective: The treatment of focal hand dystonia (FHD) needs further improvement. A deficiency of inhibition was demonstrated in patients with writer's cramp. The passage of weak DC currents across the head, or transcranial electrical polarization (TEP) has been done for many years with numerous effects described in healthy subjects and mentally diseased patients. Recently, it has been shown by objective means, in controlled experiments, that this type of treatment has robust and lasting effects on the excitability of the motor cortex in healthy humans.

Study population: 40 subjects with focal hand dystonia.

Design: We hypothesize that TEP will have a beneficial effect on hand writing in patients with FHD because it will decrease the excitability of the motor cortex compensating the deficiency of inhibition. Specifically, we propose to look at the effect of 2 mA TEP with cathode position over the hand projection in the contralateral to the affected hand primary motor cortex. Anodes will be placed over the orbit and mastoid process ipsilateral to the affected hand (contralateral to the cathode). Over a two-year period, we will enroll 40 patients with FHD and evaluate the acute TEP effects over a period of 1 week (3 TEP sessions).

Outcome measures: Symptoms will be evaluated by kinematic analysis of the handwriting and with dystonia scales.

Enrollment

12 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

  • INCLUSION CRITERIA:
  • Subjects with focal hand dystonia 18 years old or older will be included.

EXCLUSION CRITERIA:

Exclusion criteria will include the standard exclusions for TEP as well as exclusions specific to this study.

We will exclude subjects with:

  • Any significant medical or psychiatric illness (other than FHD).
  • Patients with a positive pregnancy test will be excluded because the effects of TEP on the fetus is unknown. A urine sample for pregnancy testing will be obtained prior to the TEP, and on the day of the first TEP session.
  • History of epilepsy.
  • Concurrent use of neuroleptic agents.
  • Any other licit or illicit drugs other that could lower the seizure threshold.
  • Metal implants.
  • Who have received botulinum toxin injection within 10 weeks of starting the protocol.
  • Secondary hand dystonia.
  • Mentally impaired patients having no capacity to provide their own consent will be excluded from the study because such patients may have difficulty performing the required test.
  • If participation in the study would, in the opinion of the investigators, cause undue risk or stress for reasons such as excessive fatigue, general frailty, or excessive apprehension.
  • Unable or unwilling to refrain from alcohol for 24 hours prior to study days.

Patients may continue taking muscle relaxants, artane and other anticholinergic drugs, L-DOPA and dopamine agonists.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

12 participants in 2 patient groups

1
Other group
Description:
Real TEP
Treatment:
Procedure: Transcranial Electrical Polarization (TEP)
2
Other group
Description:
Sham Stimulation
Treatment:
Procedure: Transcranial Electrical Polarization (TEP)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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