Schizophrenia Clinical Trial
Official title:
TMS Intervention Development for Auditory Hallucinations
This study will evaluate the long-term effects of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) in patients with auditory hallucinations.
Auditory hallucinations can cause distress, functional disability, and problems in
controlling behavior. In addition, auditory hallucinations are often resistant to drug
treatment. Brain imaging studies suggest that voices arise from parts of the brain that are
ordinarily involved in perceiving spoken speech. In TMS, an electromagnet placed on the
scalp produces magnetic pulses that pass through the skull and stimulate the underlying
cerebral cortex (a part of the brain). Low frequency (once per second) TMS is known to
reduce reactivity or excitability of the part of the brain directly stimulated without
damaging brain tissue. This study will determine if low frequency rTMS directed to brain
areas responsible for speech processing can be used as an alternative treatment for auditory
hallucinations and other related psychotic symptoms.
Before starting rTMS, patients will undergo: (1) a medical and psychiatric evaluation, (2)
neuropsychological tests to assess concentration and memory abilities, and (3) an fMRI brain
scan (which takes about 1 ¼ hours and does not require any injections). After these
evaluations are completed, patients will be randomly assigned (e.g., by the flip of a coin)
to receive either low frequency rTMS or placebo stimulation for 16 minutes per day over a
10-day period. During this time, the patient will not know whether (s)he is receiving the
real or the placebo stimulation. For 5 days, stimulation will be administered to an area of
the left temporal lobe of the brain that is involved in perceiving speech. This area is
called Wernicke's area. For another 5-day period, a similar area on the right side of the
brain will be stimulated. After the 10-day trial is completed, the patient will be told if
(s)he received real or placebo TMS. If the patient received real TMS and experienced
significant improvement in "voices", (s)he can choose to receive more stimulation to that
part of the brain that produced greater improvement. If the patient has received only
placebo stimulation, (s)he will then be offered a trial of real rTMS.
TMS is generally not painful, but can be uncomfortable due to a tingling or knocking
sensation and/or contraction of scalp and facial muscles. There is a small risk of seizure
associated with TMS, but for the frequency of stimulation used in this study (1 stimulation
per second), this risk is significant only for patients who have a prior history of
seizures, epilepsy, or other neurological problem. We have given TMS to more than 90 persons
with schizophrenia and auditory hallucinations and have not had a case of seizure. We are
also concerned that TMS may cause memory or concentration problems. Therefore, we carefully
monitor patients for early signs of such difficulties, using daily questionnaire assessments
and weekly neuropsychological tests. If we suspect that a patient is experiencing problems
with memory or concentration, the trial is stopped. A small percentage of patients in our
previous studies (less than 5%) reported problems with memory that ended soon after the
trial was stopped.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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