Focal Hand Dystonia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Tactile Operant Conditioning To Alleviate Focal Hand Dystonia Symptoms
Patients with focal dystonia experience uncontrollable movements of the hand during certain
types of skilled movements. Though the origin of the disorder is not fully understood, it is
thought that brain areas involved in moving the hands and receiving touch information from
the hands, are involved. For example, patients with dystonia affecting the hand show changes
in their ability to perceive touch - this is something that typically escapes the patients
own awareness. Further, the area of the brain receiving touch information has a disrupted
representation of the finger skin surfaces.
The goal of our research is to improve dystonia symptoms in patients with hand dystonia. We
will attempt to achieve this goal by implementing an intensive training treatment that
requires patients to attend to, and use touch information applied to specific fingertips.
Previous work has attempted to alter touch perception using sensory training and
improvements in motor control (hand writing) of dystonia patients were observed. For
example, learning to read Braille improves tactile perception and handwriting in focal hand
dystonia. A different approach to treat focal hand dystonia involves a technique called
repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS), and this can also temporarily improve
hand writing in dystonia patients. The proposed research will attempt to alter touch
processing using touch training alone, or in combination with rTMS. Rather than train using
Braille reading, the sensory training will be applied using a systematic, experimenter
controlled stimulus set that focuses on touch stimuli applied to individual digits.
Importantly patients will have to associate certain types of touch information with rewards
and other touch input with the lack of a reward.
The study will first involve measuring the location and representation of the touch in the
brain using multiple brain mapping tools. These tools include functional magnetic resonance
imaging and magnetoencephalography; when both tools are used a very accurate picture of
finger representation can be obtained, and we also know what brain areas respond to touch
stimuli. Dystonia symptoms and touch perception will also be assessed. Next, patients will
participate in a training intervention that involves 15 days(2.5 hr/day) of touch training
applied to the fingertips of the dystonia affected hand. Patients will identify the touch
targets amongst distractors and receive on-line performance feedback. The goal of the
training is to provide the cortex with regular boundaries of fingers and in this way,
attempt to re-shape the sensory cortex to accept these boundaries. Another group of patients
will receive rTMS. The goal of the rTMS is to create an environment in sensory cortex that
is open or 'ready' to accept changes induced by tactile stimulation. The rTMS will be
immediately followed by the tactile training. A third group of patients will receive a
placebo version of rTMS followed by tactile training. The latter group will allow us to
understand if rTMS has a definite effect on the physiology of the patient. Following the
15-day training, we will assess the brains representation of fingertips, changes in dystonia
symptoms and changes in the perception of touch stimuli.
This research will advance the treatment of focal hand dystonia and assist the design of
precise remediation training tailored to the dystonia patient.
n/a
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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