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RecruitingNCT04128306

Brain Areas of Time-To-Contact Perception: an Awake Surgery Study

Localizing in the Brain the Areas of Time to Contact Perception During an Awake Surgery

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
240 (estimated)
Sponsor
University Hospital, Toulouse · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 70 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

During a brain surgery targeted to remove a brain tumor, the neurosurgeon wakes up the patient to delimit the tumor area exactly, and identify the surrounding areas, to limit the surgery damages. The present project aims at testing the patient in this awake phase to determine the brain areas implied in time to contact (TTC) perception, a function that allows determining the arrival time of moving objects and used in many tasks of our daily life.

Detailed description

Time to contact (TTC) estimation is a major visual function that allows an observer determining the time a moving object will take to reach him. It is however striking to note that the different brain areas supporting this function are not clearly identified, in particular the contribution of non-visual areas that are engaged in the definition of a peri-personal space for the observer. This lack could be fulfilled during a brain surgery experiment. Indeed, in such a surgery, the patient is awakened, and the surgeon apply direct cortical stimulation to de-activate specific brain areas while testing different cognitive function. The failure to succeed in the task indicates that this area is engaged in the cognitive function. The present study therefore will test different brain areas to investigate their respective contribution in the TTC estimation function. Three groups of participants will be tested, in pre and per surgery phases. After an initial pre-surgery phase, patients for which the tumor does not interfere with the TTC estimation anility will be enrolled in the Pré-Per group, and tested during the brain surgery. Patients for which the pre-test indicates that the TTC estimation is damaged by the tumor, will be tested in pre-surgery phase only, constituting the Pré-End group. Finally, a control group, paired with the patients, will be tested as well. For the patients, all the testing phases will be achieved during their medical process. The awake surgery is now a well-established technique, currently and usually done at the University Hospital Toulouse, and the present test in the per surgery phase only lasts a couple of minutes, no more than 5 minutes. As such, there is no additional risk carried out in the project.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALBehavioral taskIn the task, participants will see an object approaching toward them. During its movement, the object disappears, and the participants have to press a button to indicate when they estimate the object to contact with them. The motion parameters of the ball will be varied. The pre and post-surgery phases will test the participants in a long duration version of the task, approximately 30 minutes. The per surgery phase will be made of a 5 minutes version of the task, and the participants will receive a direct cortical stimulation for 4 seconds, at an intensity of 1 to 10 milliampere (mA), in the premotor ventral area, or posterior parietal cortex or somesthetic associative areas.
PROCEDUREAwake surgeryThe patient is first anesthetized for opening the scalp and skull, then awake. During this waking phase, the surgeon passes a few quick and simple tests to the patient, visual (for example, line bisection), language (for example, repeating a list of words) etc. While doing this task, the neurosurgeon disrupts the functioning of certain brain regions by direct electrical stimulation of the cortex in order to identify the regions whose dysfunction will have an impact on the current task. During the operation, the areas involved in the construction of the peri-personal space will be stimulated by direct electrical stimulation, for a duration of 4 seconds at an intensity of 1 to 10 mA. These areas are: * Ventral premotor cortex (with the exception of the primary motor cortex controlling the dominant hand, so as not to interfere with the motor response of the patient) * Posterior parietal cortex * Associative somesthetic areas
OTHERNeurological assessmentThe Mini Mental State Evaluation, which generally assesses the cognitive state of an individual through his 6 subtests testing both working memory, episodic and semantic praxies as well as spatio-temporal orientation capacity.
OTHERNeurological assessmentThe Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale was selected for two of its subtests: The Subtest Codes checking the processing of information, visuo-constructive abilities but also attention. The subtest Cubes evaluates the capacities of visuospatial and constructive organizations as well as the referencing of the space in relation to the subject.
OTHERNeurological assessmentThe State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, consisting of two self-administered questionnaires: Questionnaire A, measuring the state of anxiety of the person on the present moment and B measuring anxiety as a character trait of the person
OTHERNeurological assessmentThe Verbal Fluences test, in its oral version. Categorial and lexical fluences make it possible to quickly realize a possible lack of the word of the person as well as disturbances of working memory or the capacity of inhibition.
OTHERNeurological assessmentThe board of the Corsi cubes that evaluates the non-verbal visual-spatial working memory of the participants with a reminder location that tests the visuo-spatial notebook and a reminder to who tests the central administrator of the working memory.
OTHERNeurological assessmentThe neurocognitive naming test was chosen to verify correct access to both semantic memory and lexicon, as well as to test the early visual process of image processing necessary for our task.
OTHERNeurological assessmentBenton lines are commonly used to determine possible deficits in the localization of isolated objects or judgment of line direction.
OTHERNeurological assessmentThe patient will finally pass a depression assessment test, answering Beck's questionnaire.

Timeline

Start date
2019-09-16
Primary completion
2025-12-01
Completion
2025-12-01
First posted
2019-10-16
Last updated
2024-10-30

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04128306. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.