Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04716296 |
Other study ID # |
0328-20-RMC |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
January 1, 2021 |
Est. completion date |
December 31, 2023 |
Study information
Verified date |
March 2023 |
Source |
Rabin Medical Center |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is a well-established and effective treatment for motor symptoms
resulting from idiopathic Parkinson's disease (PD). During the DBS surgery , a brain
electrode is implanted in the basal ganglia, which is involved in the pathophysiology of the
disease. The surgery consists of three steps: 1. Opening the skin, drilling the skull bone
and inserting a temporary electrode. 2. Recording electrical activity of the brain,
electrical stimulation of the brain which guide the implantation of the electrode.3
Transferring wires and implanting a subcutaneous pacemaker battery in the chest area.
Today, standard treatment protocols consist undergoing the second stage (or first and second
stage, depending on the treatment center protocol) of the surgery awake (under local
anesthesia only). As systemic anesthetics affect cerebral electrical activity and prevent
patient cooperation, they inhibit precise identification of the cerebral target under
'physiological navigation' guided by electrical recording and brain stimulation. As a result,
the accuracy of electrode implantation decreases. However, undergoing surgery in an awake
format often causes severe patient discomfort and anxiety necessitating shortening the length
of surgery or aborting the surgery.
As such there is a need for establishing an alternative anesthesia protocol for DBS
surgeries.
Ketamine is considered a unique anesthetic due to its hypnotic properties, analgesia, and
possible amnesia. Standard doses of ketamine are currently used worldwide to treat patients
with various injuries and brain diseases. Research from monkeys has shown that ketamine (in
low dose) does not affect electrical brain activity used for physiological navigation.
The investigators therefore propose a prospective , randomized , blinded study to evaluate
the utility of low dose of ketamine in the second stage of DBS surgeries for increasing
patient satisfaction and cooperation without detracting from the accuracy of physiological
navigation to the cerebral target.
This study will compare two treatment arms :
Treatment arm consisting of patients randomized to receive a low dose of ketamine for the
second stage of DBS surgery.
Control arm consisting of patients randomized to receive sham control of saline during the
second stage of DBS surgery.
Description:
1. On the day before surgery the participant will be shown 10 objects that he should
remember. On the day after surgery he will be requested to recall the objects he
remembers and to answer the level of anxiety he is feeling using the Visual Anxiety
Scale.
2. In the event of discharges (a possible side effect of ketamine due to muscarinic /
parasympathetic stimulation), a single dose of scopolamine (1 mg - ) will be given
intravenously.
3. At the end of the surgical phase of opening (of the same side being operated on) the
propopol will be discontinued (as routinely done), and a continuous low-dose ketamine
infusion (0.25 mg per kilogram per hour) will be given until the permanent electrode is
implanted on the same operated side, or in the event that unwanted side effects that
can't be controlled appear.
4. During surgery, monitoring of muscle activity (EMG) and brain activity (EEG) will be
performed
5. During the operation a short canola will be inserted through the meningeal opening and
fixed to the surface of the cerebral cortex.
Through the cannula A 10 mm deep microelectrode will be inserted, which will record
electrical activity from the cerebral cortex for several minutes (up to 15 minutes).
During the recording period the patient may be asked to perform a simple cognitive task
using a computer or iPad. Following the recording the canola and the microelectrode will
be removed and the canola will be inserted to the depth of the brain as part of the
standard surgery and through it the microelectrode will be inserted into the brain
target, and recording of electrical activity from the depths of the brain, as is
customary will be performed. At the end of the ketamine phase, at the end of the
electrophysiological monitoring required for navigation, prior to the electrical
stimulation, when the electrode is placed at the bottom of the sub-thalamic nucleus, the
patient will be shown for 60 seconds 10 images of objects (a single object in each
image, different from the objects presented to him the day before) which he will asked
to remember. At the same time on the screen will present electrical recordings from the
depth of the brain (MER) by the brain electrode. In addition, the patient will be asked
grade the anxiety level he is experiencing using the Visual Anxiety Scale (VAS) .
6. On the day after surgery, the patient will be asked to recall which objects were
presented to him the day before the operation and during the operation. Note that the
two object lists will be from a database of objects used in functional day-to-day life
(standard lists used for the CMT test - contextual memory test). In addition, the
patient will be asked to answer a Visual Anxiety Scale (VAS) and the Iowa satisfaction
score questionnaire detailing the patients overall overall experience, mood and feelings
during surgery.
These assessments will be performed by a neuropsychologist and using a validated
questionnaire.
7. Two weeks surgery, the patient will be presented with pictures of various objects and
will be asked to recall which of them were presented before and during surgery. In
addition the patient will be requested to fill grade his VAS anxiety scale and the IOWA
questionnaire.