Autonomic Dysfunction Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Pilot Study to Quantify the Autonomic Nervous System Balance in Healthy, Able-Bodied Individuals
Biomarkers can be evaluated to provide information about disease presence or intensity and treatment efficacy. By recording these biomarkers through noninvasive clinical techniques, it is possible to gain information about the autonomic nervous system (ANS), which involuntarily regulates and adapts organ systems in the body. Machine learning and signal processing methods have made it possible to quantify the behavior of the ANS by statistically analyzing recorded signals. This work will aim to systematically measure ANS function by multiple modalities and use decoding algorithms to derive an index that reflects overall ANS function and/or balance in healthy able-bodied individuals. Additionally, this study will determine how transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation (taVNS), a noninvasive method of stimulating the vagus nerve without surgery, affects the ANS function. Data from this research will enable the possibility of detecting early and significant changes in ANS from "normal" homeostasis to diagnose disease onset and assess severity to improve treatment protocols.
Biomarkers that reflect disease presence or intensity, or treatment efficacy are central to medical advancements. Recorded biomarkers provide information about physiological processes regulated by the autonomic nervous system (ANS), which include blood pressure, heart rate, sweating, and body temperature. The ANS has two major divisions: sympathetic and parasympathetic systems. Most organs receive reciprocal input from both systems to achieve homeostasis through ANS balance. This regulation occurs without conscious control (i.e., autonomously). Dysregulation of the ANS can occur as the result of disorders or injuries, including diabetes, sepsis, spinal cord injuries (SCI), Parkinson's disease, and many other conditions. The ANS is the part of the nervous system that regulates and integrates bodily functions that typically run involuntary, particularly internal organs including blood vessels, lungs, pupils, heart, sweat, and salivary glands. Along with immunological systems, it controls and adapts homeostasis of the internal environment based on changes in the external environment. Disturbances in autonomic regulation have been described in a variety of diseases and disorders, including those that directly affect the nervous system, such as spinal cord injuries and stroke, and those that afflict other organ systems, such as sepsis and infection, rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn's disease, diabetes mellitus, and numerous heart conditions. This dysregulation manifests differently for each of these conditions, even inconsistently across patients, and the significance of symptoms due to ANS dysfunction are not well understood. The ANS can be divided into two major branches: the sympathetic and parasympathetic systems. All internal organs are innervated by one or both component systems through the ANS main conduits, which include the brainstem, spinal cord, and cranial nerves, such as the vagus nerve. The branches typically function opposite and complementary of each other; physiological changes associated with the sympathetic system include accelerating heart rate, dilating pupils, and perspiration, while the parasympathetic system slows the heart, lowers blood pressure, and relaxes muscles. Both systems work in tandem to modulate and maintain blood pressure, vagal tone, heart rate, respiration, and cardiac contractility. While both systems operate to maintain homeostasis, the sympathetic system can be considered a quick response and mobilizing system, while the parasympathetic is a more slowly activated and dampening system. Instead of measuring the ANS directly from the central or peripheral nervous system through invasive implants, it is possible to record physiological signals through advances in noninvasive clinical testing. Laboratories are able to test autonomic function and rely on batteries of accepted, noninvasive tests. According to the American Academy of Neurology (AAN), standard techniques of autonomic testing include measuring heart rate and blood pressure variability during deep breathing, tilt table, and the Valsalva maneuver to assess cardiovagal (parasympathetic) and sudomotor (sympathetic) function. It is straightforward to add to the limited necessary equipment (blood pressure cuff, electrocardiogram [ECG]) by including electroencephalography (EEG) to measure brain activity, electromyography (EMG) to measure muscle activity, and eye tracking glasses to measure pupillometry during this battery. All noninvasive signals can be measured during controlled perturbations to characterize the ANS. Assessment of ANS function is now used in multiple disciplines, including neurology, cardiology, psychology, psychophysiology, obstetrics, anesthesiology, and psychiatry. Neural reflexes control responses in the cardiovascular, pulmonary, gastrointestinal, renal, hepatic, and endocrine systems. The vagus nerve-based inflammatory reflex is of particularly interest at the Feinstein Institute for Medical Research and has been shown to regulate immune function. The nervous system interacts with the immune system by this pathway; molecular mediators of innate immunity activate afferent signals in the vagus nerve to the brainstem, which sends efferent signals down the vagus nerve to regulate inflammation and cytokine release. Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) has been shown to decrease production and release of pro-inflammatory cytokines; bioelectronic devices have been used in preclinical and pilot clinical trials to reduce inflammation in patients with rheumatoid arthritis and Crohn's disease. The auricular branch of the vagus nerve comes from the vagus and innervates cutaneous areas of the outer ear. Transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation (taVNS) offers a non-invasive means of stimulating the vagus nerve without surgical intervention. The device consists of a clip that supplies electrical signals to processes of the auricle, and it has been used in previous clinical studies for multiple conditions, including refractory epilepsy, depression, pre-diabetes, tinnitus, memory, stroke, oromotor dysfunction, and rheumatoid arthritis, with additional studies planned for therapy or treatment of stroke, atrial fibrillation, and heart failure. These studies have used a range of electrical stimulation settings and sites; the mechanism of taVNS and responses are not well understood, as well as the effects of changes in stimulation parameters on ANS. Recently, application of machine learning models and decoding algorithms permits utilizing commonly used clinical measurement of physiological signals to better understand broader phenomena of autonomic function and dysregulation. Research has been focused on developing quantitative standards based on biomarkers to aid with diagnosis, prognosis, and estimates of treatment efficacy. Autonomic data could potentially capture objective measures of disease states, and machine learning techniques can be used to extract relevant features towards building a predictive model of ANS balance. By training such a model on recordings from healthy, able-bodied individuals, the investigators plan to characterize ANS balance, and then apply this model to new data sets and individuals to diagnose or predict disease states. Modern methods of computational science have been used to decode complex clinical and experimental data by detecting patterns, classifying signals, and extracting information towards new knowledge. Through signal processing techniques, it has been possible to decode autonomic nervous system signals conveyed through the vagus nerve by identifying groups of vagal neurons that fire in response to the administration of specific cytokines. Additionally, machine learning has been used to quantify clinical pain using multimodal autonomic metrics and neuroimaging, and large-scale ambulatory data has been used to monitor physiological signals and develop multi-sensor models to detect stress in daily life. Additionally, the investigators want to examine how these measurements are affected by the use of non-invasive transcutaneous electrical stimulation of the vagus nerve. Stimulation of the vagus nerve by a surgically implanted stimulator regulates and suppresses pro-inflammatory cytokine release. This has now been used in a successful clinical trial to treat rheumatoid arthritis and Crohn's disease. Non-invasive transcutaneous stimulation of the vagus nerve has also been showing promising early results, indicating that non-invasive methods of activating a specific part of the autonomic nervous system can be used successfully to treat disease. However, real-time biomarkers of efficacy of this treatment are not available. Here, the study will develop a framework to decode a multitude of noninvasive physiological signals during controlled autonomic testing to form a model that can quantify ANS balance, as well as the effects of taVNS on the system, in healthy and able-bodied individuals. Data derived from this study will enable the ability to detect early and significant deviations from "normal" homeostasis and provide novel non-invasive real-time biomarkers that could be used to assess disease onset or severity, as well as efficacy of a therapy in activating the ANS in a specific way. In the long-term, this will improve current treatment protocols and suggest new therapeutic opportunities. ;
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