Healthy Adults Clinical Trial
— DNDOfficial title:
Dopaminergic Neuromodulation of Decision Making in Young and Middle-Aged Adults
| Verified date | June 2019 |
| Source | Vanderbilt University |
| Contact | n/a |
| Is FDA regulated | No |
| Health authority | |
| Study type | Interventional |
Financial decisions are made during pre-retirement age that can influence financial well-being for the rest of an individual's life. This proposal aims to construct a more comprehensive model of the specific psychological and neural mechanisms that support financial decisions in young adulthood and late middle age. In Part 1 of this study (covered in Institutional Review Board (IRB) # 141812), middle-age and young adults complete basic cognitive, motivational, and decision making tasks and are studied with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to determine the relation between neural circuit activation and individual and age-related differences in decision making. In part II of the study, aspects of dopamine functioning are studied using positron emission tomography (PET) scanning to determine whether individual differences in dopamine functions are related to the decision-making and fMRI measures collected in Part 1 of the study. Dopamine measures include baseline D2 receptor availability, amphetamine induced dopamine release and dopamine transporter (DAT) levels, which provides a more comprehensive evaluation of dopamine functions than in prior studies linking individual differences in dopamine to behavioral, cognitive or decision-making traits.
| Status | Completed |
| Enrollment | 65 |
| Est. completion date | May 15, 2018 |
| Est. primary completion date | May 15, 2018 |
| Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
| Gender | All |
| Age group | 20 Years to 65 Years |
| Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: Medically, psychiatrically and neurologically healthy individuals between the 20-30 or 50-65 years of age. Subjects must be able to give informed consent, have an estimated intelligence quotient of greater than 80, and be a fluent English speaker. Exclusion Criteria: 1. Any condition which would interfere with or be a risk for MRI ( e.g. extreme obesity, claustrophobia, cochlear implant, metal fragments in eyes, cardiac pacemaker, neural stimulator, metallic body inclusions or other metal implanted in the body, facial tattoos with iron pigment). Difficulty lying on one's back and claustrophobia are also exclusions. 2. History of major psychiatric illness (including recurrent major depressive episodes or a depressive episode in the past 10 years, any anxiety disorders in the last 10 years, any history of bipolar disorder or psychotic disorder, a history of substance dependence (or substance abuse lasting more than 2 years), or any eating disorder in which symptoms persisted for more than two years 3. Current tobacco use, alcohol intake greater than 8 ounces of whiskey or equivalent per week, use of any psychotropic medication for the past 6 months (other than occasional use of benzodiazepines for sleep), psychostimulants taken more than 5 times in the subject's life, current marijuana use 4 Neurological illness (other than headache or strictly peripheral nerve disturbance), or head trauma (including more than 2 concussions) 5) Significant untreated or unregulated major medical condition deemed likely to influence cognitive functioning, dopaminergic functioning or neuroimaging measures. Diabetes is an exclusion even if well-controlled. 6) History of Syncope during blood draws 7) Anemia or hematocrit < 34. 8) Participation in any research studies in the past year that involved radiation, or exposure to radiation on a routine basis due to their occupation. 9) High blood pressure (Systolic B.P. > 150 in participants under the age of 61, or > 145 in subjects > 61 years of age). Diagnosis of labile hypertension. Abnormal EKG indicating potential cardiac risk under conditions of increased blood pressure. 10) Current pregnancy or lactation or plans to become pregnant during the study timeframe. As part of the screening process in protocol # 141812, participants are initially screened with a brief telephone interview to determine if they meet medical, psychiatric and neurological criteria (all information screened is included in attached screening form). Participants are not consented until after completion of the brief health interview (a waiver of consent is in place in order to perform the initial telephone screening). After being consented participants complete a medical history and physical exam with one of the study MD's. They also complete a psychiatric interview (SCID-IV or V) with one of the trained psychology research assistants or Dr. Zald, and finally an EKG is completed. Participants are not enrolled in the present phase of the study until all exclusion criteria are assessed and they are withdrawn from the study if new information arises that would alter the conclusion regarding any of the inclusion/exclusion criteria after enrollment. |
| Country | Name | City | State |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | Zald Affective Neuroscience Lab- Vanderbilt University | Nashville | Tennessee |
| Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
|---|---|
| Vanderbilt University | Duke University |
United States,
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* Note: There are 71 references in all — Click here to view all references
| Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Dopamine D2 receptor availability (binding potential) | D2 receptor availability is measured using positron emission tomography (PET) and the D2/D3 receptor radioligand [18F] fallypride. Contrast between receptor availability after amphetamine versus placebo forms the primary measure of dopamine release induced by amphetamine. | 3- 6.5 hours | |
| Secondary | Quantification of Dopamine Transporter Levels | Dopamine transporter levels will be quantified with [18F]-FE-PE2I. | 0 - 2 hours | |
| Secondary | Decision Making Task 1 | Effort Expenditure for Reward Task | 1-3 hours | |
| Secondary | Decision Making Task 2 | Two-stage reward learning paradigm that follows the procedures by Daw et al. (2011) | 1-3 hours | |
| Secondary | Cognitive Task 1 (processing speed) | WAIS-III Digit Symbol Coding and Symbol Search (aggregate score) | 1 - 2 hours | |
| Secondary | Cognitive Task 2 (verbal fluency) | Controlled Oral Word Association Test | 1 - 2 hours | |
| Secondary | Cognitive Task 3 | N-back task Working Memory Task (2-back & 3-back) | 1 - 2 hours | |
| Secondary | Motor Task 1 | Finger Tapping Speed | 1 - 2 hours | |
| Secondary | Change in Spontaneous Eye Blink Rate | Eye Blink Rate is measured with an eye tracker for 10 minutes, on or off amphetamine | 1-2 hours |
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