Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effects of Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) on Pain Modulation in Individuals With Parkinson's Disease in the Off State
Verified date | June 2023 |
Source | Universidad Francisco de Vitoria |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Parkinson's Disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by motor and non-motor symptoms. Pain is a significant symptom in PD, affecting a large percentage of patients and impacting their quality of life. The mechanisms of pain in PD involve complex changes in pain-modulating pathways, including dopaminergic and non-dopaminergic systems. To address the lack of pain management strategies, the investigators propose exploring non-pharmacological therapies like transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS). tDCS is a safe and non-invasive technique that modulates neuronal activity. It has shown positive effects on pain processing in healthy individuals and chronic pain patients, but its potential for PD-associated pain remains largely unexplored. The primary motor cortex (M1) is a target for tDCS as it is believed to influence pain processing in other brain regions involved in sensory and emotional aspects. Initial studies suggest the benefits of tDCS in PD, including enhanced motor potentials and potential modulation of dopaminergic pathways. However, there are currently no published studies specifically investigating the effects of tDCS on PD-related pain, highlighting the need for further research. A proof-of-concept trial is proposed to examine the effects of a single tDCS session on M1 in PD patients during the OFF state (without medication) and after taking dopaminergic medication. The study aims to assess the pain-relieving effects of tDCS in PD and explore potential synergies between tDCS and dopaminergic medication. By better understanding the impact of tDCS on pain relief in PD, this research may offer insights into alternative non-pharmacological approaches for managing pain in PD.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 15 |
Est. completion date | April 11, 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | March 15, 2024 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Diagnosis of Idiopathic Parkinson´s Disease. - Presence of Parkinson´s Disease-related pain in the off-state. - Neuroimaging study without previous pathologies. - Score > 5 in transfers (bed to chair and back) item in Barthel Index. - Score = or > 26 in Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA). - Tolerability for the application of electrotherapy. - Able to provide informed consent to participate in the study - Pain intensity >= 3 in Visual Analogue Scale or equivalent. Exclusion Criteria: - Neurologic disease different from PD. - Pain non-related to PD. - Dermatologic problems, wounds, or ulcers in the electrode's application area. - Presence of implants or metal pieces in the head. - Presence of cardiac pacemaker, vagal, brain or transcutaneous stimulators, medication pumps, ventriculoperitoneal shunts or aneurysm clips. - Significative difficulties in language. - History of alcohol or drugs abuse. - Non-controlled medical problems. - Pregnancy. - Epilepsy |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Spain | Hospital Beata Maria Ana | Madrid |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Universidad Francisco de Vitoria | Hospital Beata María Ana, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos |
Spain,
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Perez-Lloret S, Ciampi de Andrade D, Lyons KE, Rodriguez-Blazquez C, Chaudhuri KR, Deuschl G, Cruccu G, Sampaio C, Goetz CG, Schrag A, Martinez-Martin P, Stebbins G; Members of the MDS Committee on Rating Scales Development. Rating Scales for Pain in Park — View Citation
Santos-Garcia D, Oreiro M, Perez P, Fanjul G, Paz Gonzalez JM, Feal Painceiras MJ, Cores Bartolome C, Valdes Aymerich L, Garcia Sancho C, Castellanos Rodrigo MDM. Impact of Coronavirus Disease 2019 Pandemic on Parkinson's Disease: A Cross-Sectional Survey — View Citation
Silverdale MA, Kobylecki C, Kass-Iliyya L, Martinez-Martin P, Lawton M, Cotterill S, Chaudhuri KR, Morris H, Baig F, Williams N, Hubbard L, Hu MT, Grosset DG; UK Parkinson's Pain Study Collaboration. A detailed clinical study of pain in 1957 participants — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | King´s Parkinson´s Disease Pain Scale score | Parkinson´s Disease specific scale that evaluates the localization, frequency, and intensity of pain. It has 14 items distributed in 7 domains: 1. Musculoskeletal Pain; 2. Chronic Pain; 3. Fluctuation-related Pain; 4. Nocturnal Pain; 5. Oro-facial Pain; 6. Discoloration, Oedema/Swelling Pain; 7. Radicular Pain. Each item is scored by severity (0, none to 3, very severe) multiplied by frequency (0, never to 4, all the time) resulting in a subscore of 0 to 12, the sum of which gives the total score with a theoretical range from 0 to 168, with higher scores indicating more severity and frequency of pain. | Baseline | |
Other | Brief Pain Inventory score | It contains 15 items, including 2 multi-item scales to measure the intensity of pain and its impact on the function and welfare of patients. It also presents open questions to assess the localization of pain and the treatment used for its management, just as its effectiveness. Scores oscillate from 0 to 110, with higher scores indicating more pain and more impact on function and welfare of patients | Baseline | |
Other | Beck´s Depression Inventory | Measures depressive symptoms. Scores range from 0 to 63 leading to 6 groups: 0-10, normal; 11-16, mild mood disturbance; 17-20, borderline clinical depression; 21-30, moderate depression; 31-40, severe depression; and over 40, extreme depression | Baseline | |
Other | State-Trait Anxiety Inventory | Measures anxious states and anxious traits. It has 20 items for assessing trait anxiety and 20 for state anxiety. All items are rated on a 4-point scale (e.g., from "Almost Never" to "Almost Always"). Higher scores indicate greater anxiety | Baseline | |
Other | Tampa Scale of Kinesiophobia | Measures fear of movement-related pain. Its scores range from 11-44 points with higher scores indicating greater fear of pain, movement, and injury | Baseline | |
Other | Pain Catastrophizing Scale | Measures catastrophizing thinking. Its total score range from 0-52, along with three subscale scores assessing rumination, magnification and helplessness, with higher scores indicating higher level of catastrophizing. | Baseline | |
Other | PD-specific 16-items Parkinson Fatigue Scale | It is a scale that measures the specific fatigue experienced by patients with Parkinson's disease. It consists of 16 items with five response categories ranging from 0 (strongly disagree) to 4 (strongly agree). The final sum of these items yields a total score ranging from zero to 64, with higher scores indicating higher levels of fatigue. If the scale is not available in Spanish, either the Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS) or the Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory (MFI) will be used, as they have been validated for Parkinson's disease and recommended by the International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society (MDS). | Baseline | |
Primary | Change in Conditioned Pain Modulation | Assesses the descending pain modulatory system. The Pain Pressure Threshold will be assessed in the middle ofthe distal phalanx of the thumb with ta handheld algometer, corresponding to the first test stimulus. Afterward, the patient will immerse the contrary hand up to the wrist into stirred ice-cold water (0-4º) maintaining it for 3 minutes, corresponding to the conditioning stimulus. If the pain is unbearable before the 3 minutes, the patient will be able to remove his/her hand. Immediately after removing the hand, a second Pain Pressure Threshold measure will be performed in the same place as the first one, corresponding to the second test stimulus. After 1-minute rest, a third Pain Pressure Threshold will be measured to assess the Conditioned Pain Modulation residual functioning. | From baseline to immediately post tDCS | |
Primary | Change in Conditioned Pain Modulation | Assesses the descending pain modulatory system. The Pain Pressure Threshold will be assessed in the middle ofthe distal phalanx of the thumb with ta handheld algometer, corresponding to the first test stimulus. Afterward, the patient will immerse the contrary hand up to the wrist into stirred ice-cold water (0-4º) maintaining it for 3 minutes, corresponding to the conditioning stimulus. If the pain is unbearable before the 3 minutes, the patient will be able to remove his/her hand. Immediately after removing the hand, a second Pain Pressure Threshold measure will be performed in the same place as the first one, corresponding to the second test stimulus. After 1-minute rest, a third Pain Pressure Threshold will be measured to assess the Conditioned Pain Modulation residual functioning. | From baseline to immediately post dopaminergic medication | |
Primary | Changes in Pain Pressure Threshold | Two Pain Pressure Thresholds will be measured by a handheld algometer, one over the most painful area (peripheric hyperalgesia) and the other one over the middle of the distal phalanx of the thumb (central hyperalgesia). The Pain Pressure Threshold will be applied with the algometer perpendicular to the skin increasing at a rate of 1 kg/s until the first sensation of pain. 3 measures with 30-seconds rest between pulses will be performed, taking the average as Pain.
Pressure Threshold. |
From baseline to immediately post tDCS | |
Primary | Changes in Pain Pressure Threshold | Two Pain Pressure Thresholds will be measured by a handheld algometer, one over the most painful area (peripheric hyperalgesia) and the other one over the middle of the distal phalanx of the thumb (central hyperalgesia). The Pain Pressure Threshold will be applied with the algometer perpendicular to the skin increasing at a rate of 1 kg/s until the first sensation of pain. 3 measures with 30-seconds rest between pulses will be performed, taking the average as Pain.
Pressure Threshold. |
From baseline to immediately post dopaminergic medication | |
Primary | Changes in Visual Numeric Pain Rating Scale | It will be used to measure pain intensity due to its high discriminatory power. The scale assesses pain intensity using numbers or words through various types of scales ranging from 0 to 10. Pain rating ranges from 0 (no pain), 1-3 (mild pain, mild discomfort or irritation, slight impairment in daily activities), 4-6 (moderate pain, significant impairment in daily activities), and 7-10 (severe pain, inability to perform daily activities). | From baseline to immediately post tDCS | |
Primary | Changes in Visual Numeric Pain Rating Scale | It will be used to measure pain intensity due to its high discriminatory power. The scale assesses pain intensity using numbers or words through various types of scales ranging from 0 to 10. Pain rating ranges from 0 (no pain), 1-3 (mild pain, mild discomfort or irritation, slight impairment in daily activities), 4-6 (moderate pain, significant impairment in daily activities), and 7-10 (severe pain, inability to perform daily activities). | From baseline to immediately post dopaminergic medication | |
Primary | Changes in Global Rating of Change | It will be used to measure the self-perceived change in the patient's pain state. Its main objective is to quantify the extent to which a patient has improved or worsened over a specific period of time. It involves a single question asked to the patient to rate their change compared to the pre-intervention state, and the scores will range from -7 (much worse than before), through 0 (same as before), to +7 (much better than before). | From baseline to immediately post tDCS | |
Primary | Changes in Global Rating of Change | It will be used to measure the self-perceived change in the patient's pain state. Its main objective is to quantify the extent to which a patient has improved or worsened over a specific period of time. It involves a single question asked to the patient to rate their change compared to the pre-intervention state, and the scores will range from -7 (much worse than before), through 0 (same as before), to +7 (much better than before). | From baseline to immediately post dopaminergic medication | |
Secondary | Changes in Brain Symmetry Index in electroencephalography | Resting state EEG: A 64-channel EEG recording will be performed at rest for 3 minutes following the standard protocol for baseline assessment.
Tapping EEG: A 64-channel EEG recording will be conducted while performing a tapping task for 30 seconds. The recording will be done separately for each hand, starting with the dominant hand. Closed-Eyes EEG: A 64-channel EEG recording will be conducted while participants have their eyes closed for 5 minutes. |
From baseline to immediately post tDCS | |
Secondary | Changes in Brain Symmetry Index in electroencephalography | Resting EEG: A 64-channel EEG recording will be performed at rest for 3 minutes following the standard protocol for baseline assessment.
Tapping EEG: A 64-channel EEG recording will be conducted while performing a tapping task for 30 seconds. The recording will be done separately for each hand, starting with the dominant hand. Closed-Eyes EEG: A 64-channel EEG recording will be conducted while participants have their eyes closed for 5 minutes. |
From baseline to immediately post dopaminergic medication | |
Secondary | Changes in Unified Parkinson´s Disease Rating Scale | It is a quantitative scale that collects information about the frequency and severity of motor symptoms. Higher scores indicate a greater degree of impairment. The minumum value is 0 and the maximum is 68. | From baseline to immediately post dopaminergic medication | |
Secondary | Changes in Finger tapping task | Finger Taping task, where the participants will be instructed to press the space bar on the keyboard as fast as possible and repeatedly with the index finger, to measure motor function. | From baseline to immediately post dopaminergic medication |
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