Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
This is a longitudinal, triple-blind, randomized-controlled, prospective interventional study assessing patients with cerebellar ataxia, including spinocerebellar ataxia type 3 (SCA3) and multiple system atrophy-cerebellar type (MSA-C), to examine the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) for up to 3 months.
Full description
Transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) is a relatively recent method that noninvasively modulates brain oscillations, and can effectively stimulate deep brain regions, affect brain rhythm, increase neural plasticity, change neurotransmitter levels, and improve brain function. It is a comfortable, safe, effective, non-invasive, and easy-to-operate method, which means it has development potential in relevant medical fields. It has been approved by the FDA for clinically treating neuropsychiatric diseases.
This is a prospective, longitudinal, triple-blind, randomized-controlled, interventional study designed to evaluate the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of tACS in patients of SCA3 and MSA-C in China. Based on typical guidelines, we will use the tACS paradigm (bilateral mandible as a place for active electrode stimulation electrode, and the inion for the return electrode). This study has two parts. The patients studied in the Part Ⅰ are SCA3. The patients studied in the Part Ⅱ are MSA-C. Every part of study, subjects will be randomized into two groups, one receiving a 10-day (5 days/week for 2 weeks) treatment with real cerebellar tACS (CB-tACS) and the other receiving a sham stimulation. The patient's motor function, cognitive function, sleep, mental state, plantar pressure, and magnetic resonance imaging will be assessed before and after the intervention.
There will be a total of 4 visits. All patients receiving tACS will be visited face to face at baseline, day 1, day 30, and day 90 after the treatment begins.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
for SCA3
for MSA-C
Exclusion criteria
Patients who have concomitant epilepsy.
Patients with a serious cognitive disorder, behavioral disorder, or mental illness
Patients with a history of seizures, stroke, encephalitis, or other degenerative neurological diseases
Patients with a serious medical disease
History of head injury or neurosurgical interventions.
History of any metal in the head (outside the mouth).
Known history of any metallic particles in the eye, implanted cardiac pacemaker, implanted neurostimulators, surgical clips (above the shoulder line), or any medical pumps.
Patients who have taken other investigational products within 4 weeks before being enrolled in this clinical trial, or patients who are pregnant or breastfeeding.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
164 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Shi-Rui Gan, MD, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal