Anxiety Clinical Trial
Official title:
Using Real-time fMRI-based Neurofeedback With Anxious Adolescents
Adolescents are particularly vulnerable to psychological problems, partly because of
dramatic changes in the brain, along with changes in social interactions patterns as they
move from childhood towards adulthood. One of the most common problems is anxiety, which
affects up to 1 in 4 adolescents. Moreover, paediatric anxiety predicts lifelong persistent
mental health problems, which are estimated to cost the UK taxpayer £8.6 billion annually.
Young people with anxiety experience intense fears and worries, leading to problems with
friendships, poor school performance, and long-term mental health difficulties. Research
investigating how and why some young people develop anxiety is therefore critically needed
so that strategies for early intervention can be developed.
This research will test the hypothesis that using a novel training intervention, - which
teaches participants to change the way that their brain responds to emotional stimuli - will
allow the investigators to influence response strategies while they are being established
and possibly reduce the risk for anxiety in the long run. To achieve this, the investigators
will test 50 adolescent females (aged 14-17 years) varying in anxiety levels to investigate
whether brain responses in emotion regulation regions can be up/down regulated using
fMRI-based neurofeedback.The rationale behind this research approach is that successful
changes in brain response may then provide the participant with an additional, 'bodily'
feeling of how respond to an emotional stimulus in real life situations, thereby paving the
path towards the development of effective, age-appropriate intervention approaches.
This study is part of workpackage 4 of the Braintrain project (EU-FP7 n°602186), which
responds to a huge clinical need for mechanism-driven therapies in psychiatry. Advances in
neuroimaging and other neuroscience techniques have produced a wealth of information about
the neural networks that can contribute to these disorders and their treatment (Linden,
2012). This information can now be harnessed to pinpoint both dysfunction and potential
compensatory mechanisms in individual patients. It is important for the choice of
neuroimaging technique that major nodes of such disordered networks are in deep regions of
the brain such as subcortical nuclei (amygdala and nucleus accumbens) and/or midline
cortical regions (medial prefrontal cortex, subgenual cingulate cortex, retrosplenial
cortex), which are very difficult to probe via EEG alone. Through the development of
fMRI-based NF (henceforth NF) techniques over the last decade by collaboration of members of
this consortium (Weiskopf et al., 2004a; Weiskopf et al., 2004b), it has become a realistic
proposition to train patients in the self-regulation of these networks and thus obtain
clinical benefits (deCharms, 2007). In addition to this therapeutic option, NF can also take
the investigation of the neural mechanisms of mental disorders to a new level because it
allows the investigators to establish causal relationships by changing regional activity and
assessing effects on behaviour and mental states in real-time.
In the current study, the investigators aim to provide proof of concept for using NF with
adolescents with varying anxiety levels aged 14-17 years. Anxiety disorders are common,
having an estimated lifetime prevalence of 10-25%, and often begin in late childhood/early
adolescence. There are currently no effective prevention programmes and current treatments
yield variable outcomes. Improving our understanding of the mechanisms by which anxiety
disorders first develop can inform the design of effective and targeted interventions for
prevention. The transition to adolescence may mark one such developmentally-sensitive
juncture for the onset of lifelong persistent anxiety problems, where new interventions such
as NF may be particularly effective (Cohen Kadosh et al., 2013). Particularly, it has been
suggested that increased emotionality and ongoing development in the neuro-cognitive bases
of emotion regulation abilities during adolescence may be one of the factors contributing to
the increased risk of anxiety disorders in this age group (Haller et al., in press).
This study builds on previous work by the investigators, which has established the
suitability of using NF with paediatric populations (Cohen Kadosh et al., in preparation).
Specifically, here, the investigators will use NF to train 50 adolescent girls with varying
anxiety levels to increase effective connectivity in the neural networks involved in emotion
regulation abilities (Cohen Kadosh et al., in preparation; Kohn et al., 2014; Ruiz et al.,
2013). The rationale for this approach is that by improving the information flow in these
brain regions, emotion regulation abilities will also improve. Moreover, the investigators
hope to be able to show that in turn, improvements in emotion regulation abilities will
affect overall anxiety levels. Last, by recruiting participants across a wide range of
anxiety levels, the investigators will also be able to assess variations in regulation
success as a function of individual anxiety levels.
;
Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Basic Science
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