Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Difficulty to sustain attention over a prolonged period of time is one of the core difficulties experienced by people who have undergone traumatic brain injury. Rehabilitation of attention is often based on compensatory strategies, because of the limited impact of cognitive training on improving attentional capacity after brain injury. New therapeutic approaches to explore the plastic recovery of the brain after injury, and consequent performance improvement, are warranted.

Neurofeedback (NFB) allows the self-regulation of brain activity using visual feedback. Very recently, it has been demonstrated that NFB training targeted at reducing alpha power (alpha desynchronization NFB), can induce initial plastic changes in brain networks associated with attention. It has been proposed that NFB can improve cognitive performance by tuning oscillatory activity of the brain towards a more healthy balance between neural network flexibility and stability. It is speculated that the use of alpha desynchronization NFB training, with people who present with brain injury, can enhance sustained attention in as much as the training promotes neural variability during resting state (i.e. more flexible network configuration) and neural stability during a sustained attention task (i.e. more stable network configuration).

However, before assessing the effectiveness of the intervention, it is necessary to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability thereof. This study will recruit 14 participants and randomly assign them to two groups: a NFB group and a video games control group. Long-term changes will be evaluated at two time points for both groups: baseline and post-intervention. The NFB group will have a follow-up session one week after the intervention, to evaluate whether there are long lasting changes after NFB training. In addition, short-term changes of NFB will be evaluated for the experimental group, contrasting EEG activity immediately before and after the last NFB session.


Clinical Trial Description

Participants taking part in the neurofeedback group will undertake sixteen 30-minute sessions of neurofeedback training, from Tuesday to Friday, distributed over the course of four weeks. Sessions will be performed at the same time each day. Each 30-min NFB session will consist of 7 x 3-minute blocks of training flanked by a 3-minute resting state block with eyes-open. During the training blocks participants will seat in front of a laptop screen displaying an image that will change according the brain activity produced by the participant. One electrode will be located at the centro parietal region of the scalp (Pz) and another one in the earlobe as a reference. Participants taking part in the control group will play video games for 30 minutes during the same number of sessions, also distributed across four weeks. The same experimental set-up will be used, but EEG activity will not be recorded. Participants will follow the same structure as the NFB group, playing video games during 7 x 3-minute blocks flanked by a 3-minute seated relaxation.

Each participant will be involved in the study for a maximum of 5 weeks. The NFB training and control sessions for all participants are expected to be completed over the course of five months. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03324178
Study type Interventional
Source University of Glasgow
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date February 2, 2018
Completion date July 17, 2018

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Enrolling by invitation NCT05542108 - Adding Motion to Contact: A New Model for Low-cost Family Centered Very-early Onset Intervention in Very Preterm-born Infants N/A
Completed NCT03400904 - Extubation Strategies in Neuro-Intensive Care Unit Patients and Associations With Outcome.
Completed NCT06073145 - Transcranial Doppler Using Wearable Ultrasound Patch
Recruiting NCT03899532 - Remote Ischemic Conditioning in Traumatic Brain Injury N/A
Recruiting NCT06010823 - Safety and Efficacy Evaluation of the Robotic Enhanced Error Training of Upper Limb Function in Post-stroke and Post TBI Participants N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05833568 - Five-day 20-minute 10-Hz tACS in Patients With a Disorder of Consciousness N/A
Withdrawn NCT04288076 - The Brain and Lung Interaction (BALI) Study N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT02756585 - Computed Tomography Perfusion in Patients With Severe Head Injury N/A
Completed NCT03162484 - Physical Activity and Chronic Acquired Brain Injury N/A
Terminated NCT01430988 - Observational Study of the BrainScope® Ahead™ M-100 in UK Emergency Department Patients With Head Injury N/A
Completed NCT01093053 - Mind-Body Skills Groups for the Treatment of War Zone Stress in Military and Veteran Populations N/A
Completed NCT00975338 - The LETS Study: A Longitudinal Evaluation of Transition Services
Completed NCT00878631 - Feasibility Trial of Traumatic Brain Injured Patients Randomized in the Prehospital Setting to Either Hypertonic Saline and Dextran Versus Normal Saline Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT03166722 - Cerebral Regional Tissue Oxygen Saturation to Guide Oxygen Delivery in Preterm Neonates During Immediate Transition N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT04478812 - Tbit System Precision and Correlation of Different Blood Samples N/A
Recruiting NCT05309005 - Virtual Reality and Social Cognition After Acquired Brain Injury
Recruiting NCT05443542 - VIrtual Reality in Cognitive Rehabilitation of Processing Speed for Persons With ABI N/A
Completed NCT02702635 - Measuring Blood Flow Characteristics Using Dynamic Contrast Enhanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging N/A
Withdrawn NCT04247321 - Non-invasive Near-infrared Spectroscopy (NIRS) Versus Invasive Licox Intracranial Pressure N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT04386525 - Omega 3 and Ischemic Stroke; Fish Oil as an Option Phase 4