Peripheral Neuropathy Clinical Trial
Official title:
Central Mechanisms of Calmare: an fMRI Trial
Pilot one-treatment and extended 10-treatment studies are carried out on participants with peripheral neuropathy comparing traditional TENS and Calmare stimulation protocols using a double-blind apparatus. Resting fMRI scans are obtained before and after the treatment, as well as after most of the pain has returned.
Pain can be either useful or harmful. Acute pain conveys information to the brain about real
or potential damage that can productively lead to avoidance or treatment of the damage.
However, chronic pain, which extends beyond these useful purposes, becomes a potentially
debilitating inconvenience. Estimations based on surveys report that as many as 33% of
Americans suffer from chronic pain, with a significant portion being unable to successfully
manage it.
The current means to treating chronic pain include: surgery, drug therapy, physical therapy,
psychological intervention, and others. Unfortunately, despite these options, many people
continue to suffer from a chronic pain condition. Neuropathic pain, or pain caused by nervous
system damage, is particularly hard to treat. Drug therapy and surgery have relatively low
success rates and undesirable side effects. Thus, there is a need for additional research and
new treatment methods for neuropathic pain patients.
The Calmare device was designed as one such means to treat chronic neuropathic pain. It works
through electrostimulation of the skin near the pain site, and, according to recent studies,
has significantly reduced chronic neuropathic pain in most subjects (Majithia et al., 2016).
Previous studies of Calmare effectiveness have defined the success of treatment as the
reduction of reported pain levels by the patient. Though useful, these studies fail to
provide an objective measurement of pain reduction and fail to discover the mechanisms by
which it occurs. In addition, previous studies have been unable to perform a true
double-blind experiment in which the placebo effect was entirely accounted for. The pilot
study takes a step toward filling this gap by performing a double blind, randomized
single-treatment trial comparing Calmare efficacy to traditional transcutaneous electrical
nerve stimulation (TENS) efficacy. The ten-treatment study examines the durability of the
pain relief for 12 weeks after the treatment period.
The goal of these studies is two-fold: first, to use fMRI before and after a full therapeutic
Calmare treatment course to determine the extent to which Calmare affects the connectivity of
the pain centers of the brain, and second, to determine whether traditional TENS or Calmare
is more effective in reducing neuropathic chronic pain. The Calmare treatment is administered
in a double-blind fashion with neither the technician, nor the subject knowing whether the
TENS or the Calmare is being administered. The investigator's hypothesis is that Calmare
therapy decreases subject pain through a central mechanism that will be manifest in decreased
functional connectivity of the brain's pain centers. The degree to which this happens is
determined by comparing the decrease in pain intensity, as reported by the patient, with the
difference in fMRI BOLD temporal correlations between pain centers.
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