Low Back Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Immediate and Short-term Effects of Single-session Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation on Pain Thresholds In Patients With Chronic Low Back Pain - A Pilot Study
Chronic low back pain (CLBP) is a common reason for which patients are treated with opioids. Because the misuse of prescription opioids has become a serious problem in the Uinted States, finding effective alternative non-pharmaceutical interventions for chronic pain management has become an urgent matter. A phenomenon termed central sensitization (i.e. mal-adaption of the brain) has been hypothesized to be an underlying mechanism for the development of chronic pain, leading to sensory hypersensitivity to extremal stimuli. Therefore, non-invasive brain stimulation, such as repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) may be an effective intervention to regulate brain excitability, thus reducing chronic pain. However, research has shown inconclusive evidence regarding the rTMS effects on chronic pain reduction, partly due to the heterogeneity of participants in studies to date. Therefore, the primary purpose of this study is to investigate the immediate and short-term effects of rTMS on neurosensory changes (i.e., pain thresholds) in patients with CLBP. The secondary purpuse of the study is to explore the relationship between changes of cortical excitability (TMS parameters) and changes of pain thresholds after the rTMS intervention in patients with CLBP.
Research Design
A pre- and post-test research design will be used to examine the immediate and one-week
carry-over effects of a single-session of rTMS intervention on individuals with CLBP. The
primary outcome measures, including PPT, cold pain threshold (CPT), heat pain threshold
(HPT), and heat-generated temporal summation (TS), will be collected three times: before the
rTMS intervention, immediately after the intervention, and one week after the intervention.
Participants
Eligible participants are adults 18 years of age or older and who have had LBP for more than
6 months. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, chronic pain is
defined as pain lasts more than 3 months or past the time of normal tissue healing. In order
to ensure the development of central sensitization in the investigator's participants, only
individuals with LBP for more than 6 months will be enrolled in this study.
Participants will be excluded from the study if they have previous low back surgery, systemic
joint disease (e.g. rheumatoid arthritis), evidence of red flags (e.g. fracture, infection,
tumor, cauda equina syndrome), cancer, neurological disorders, neuropathy, Raynaud's Disease
or pregnancy, and inability to maintain the testing and treatment positions (i.e. sitting,
supine hook-lying and prone-lying) for 15 minutes at a time. Additional exclusion criteria
for the rTMS intervention include: 1) history of significant head trauma, 2) electrical,
magnetic, or mechanical implantation (e.g. cardiac pacemakers or intracerebral vascular
clip), 3) metal implantation in the head and neck areas, 4) history of seizures or
unexplained loss of consciousness, 5) immediate family member with epilepsy, 6) use of
seizure threshold lowering medicine, 7) current abuse of alcohol or drugs, and 8) history of
psychiatric illness requiring medication controls.
Procedure
After the participant is enrolled the study, the participant will be asked to complete an
intake form, collecting their demographic data (age, gender, height, weight, occupation, hand
dominance), past medical history, and questions related to their low back pain (onset, injury
mechanism if any, location, duration, type, and nature). In addition, 4 self-reported
questionnaires will be collected from all of the participants before the rTMS treatment,
including pain intensity determined using the NPRS, disability determined using the Modified
Oswestry Low Back Pain Disability Questionnaire quality of life determined by the
Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System® - short form (PROMIS-29), and
severity of central sensitization determined by the Central Sensitization Inventory (CSI ).
These questionnaires are commonly used in research studies of chronic pain or CLBP.
1. Pain Threshold Tests:
All participants will undergo a battery of tests to determine their sensory thresholds,
including pressure, cold and heat pain thresholds and heat-generated temporal summation
(TS). The pain thresholds and TS will be measured from three sites: the most painful
point of low back, as well as the web space (WS) and the tibialis anterior (TA) of the
painful side. Those who report no pain difference between the right and left low back,
pain thresholds will be measured from the right side. The TA testing site will be in the
muscle belly of the TA, approximately 2.5 cm lateral and 5 cm inferior to the tibial
tubercle. The WS and TA sites were chosen because they are the most commonly selected
sites in research studies for chronic pain. In addition, the first interosseous index
(FDI) is located in the WS, where is the target site for the TMS assessment and
intervention.
Pressure pain threshold (PPT) testing: A hand-held computerized pressure algometer
(Medoc ltd., Ramat Yishai, Israel) will be used to measure the PPTs. The algometer
consists of a 1-sqaure centermeter round tip which will be pressed vertically on the
target location of the muscle. To provoke the patient's pain or discomfort, pressure
will be increased at a rate of 40 kPa/sec until the participant feels pain as indicated
by pressing a patient safety unit. The limit of pressure threshold will be set at 800
kPa, meaning that a pressure exceeding 800 kPa will be cut off to minimize tissue
damage. If the participant does not push the button at 800 kPa, a value of 800 is used
as the threshold value. Three trials of PPT testing will be administered to each testing
site, and the average of the three trials will be used for data analysis.
Cold and heat pain threshold testing: A Medoc TSA II Neurosensory Analyzer (Medoc ltd.,
Ramat Yishai, Israel) will be used to measure heat and cold pain thresholds. All thermal
pain threshold tests will be obtained with ramped stimuli (0°5 C/s) which can be
terminated when the participant presses a safety button. Cut-off temperatures will be
set 0 and 52°C, and the baseline temperature will be set at 32°C (i.e., average skin
temperature). The contact area of the thermode is 23mmx30mm. All thermal pain threshold
tests will be demonstrated first at an area somewhere other than the three testing
sites. Three trials of thermal pain threshold tests will be administered per testing
site and the average of the three trials will be used for statistical analysis.
Heat-generated temporal summation (TS) testing: The instrument used for measuring cold
and heat pain thresholds will be used for the heat-generated TS test. During TS testing,
10 consecutive heat pulses of 0.5 sec duration will be delivered at an inter-stimulus
interval of 2.5 sec. The temperature of the heat stimuli will increase from 40°C as a
baseline temperature and inter-stimulus temperature, to 48°C at a rate of 8°C/sec.
Participants will be asked to rate their pain intensity of each heat pulse on the NPRS
of 0-100 (0 being no pain, 100 being unbearable pain). The TS score will be calculated
by averaging the pain rating for the 10th stimulus and the 5th stimulus minus the 1st
pain rating, with higher score indicating greater hypersensitivity of pain.
2. Cortical Excitability Assessment
A series of single pulse generated from a TMS machine (Rapid2, Magstim Co., UK) will be
used to determine corticospinal excitability. Because the rTMS intervention will target
the M1 area, specifically in the area corresponding to the FDI muscle, motor evoked
potentials (MEPs), namely electromyographic (EMG) activity, will be recorded from the
FDI muscle to determine the "hot spot" for the rTMS intervention. A hot spot is defined
as the site at which the largest MEP amplitude is obtained at the lowest TMS stimulation
intensity.
First, a pair of surface EMG electrodes will be placed on the FDI muscle when the
participant is seated on a reclining chair and wearing a pair of earplugs to reduce
their awareness of noise from the rTMS equipment. Similar to the pain threshold testing
on the low back, EMG activity will be measured from FDI muscle on the same side of the
patient as the LBP. For those who report no difference in LBP between sides, EMG data
will be recorded from the FDI of the right hand. The Mega 600 EMG machine (Mega
Electronics Ltd., Finland) will be used to collect EMG data at a sampling rate of
2,000Hz and bandpass-filtered at 15-500Hz. During the cortical excitability assessment,
each participant will wear a Lycra swimming cap with a pre-marked grid. The intensity of
TMS will begin at 40% of maximum stimulator output and then will be increased gradually
to yield a MEP from the FDI until a 'hot spot' is observed. Next, the resting motor
threshold (RMT) will be defined. RMT is the stimulation intensity which yields a
peak-to-peak amplitude of MEP larger than 50 μV in 5 out of 10 consecutive trials. Once
the RMT is determined, the stimulation intensity will be set at 120% of RMT and 10
stimulations will be delivered to the hot-spot. The 10 supra-threshold MEP amplitudes
recorded from the FDI will be averaged and the average will be used for the
representation of corticospinal excitability.
3. rTMS Intervention
After the corticospinal excitability assessment, participants will receive 10Hz rTMS
delivered to the hot-spot contralateral to the painful side in the form of twenty 10-second
pulse trains (a total of 2,000 pulses) with a 50-second inter-train interval. The rTMS will
be delivered via an air-filled coil (see figure to the right). The stimulation intensity will
be set at 90% of RMT. After the rTMS intervention, the participant's corticospinal
excitability will be re-assessed using the single-pulse TMS method as described earlier.
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