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Active Not RecruitingNCT05179187

Non-invasive Brain Mapping of Movement Facilitation in Parkinson's Disease

Status
Active Not Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
90 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of California, Los Angeles · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Several strategies or contexts help patients with Parkinson's disease to move more quickly or normally, however the brain mechanisms underlying these phenomena are poorly understood. The proposed studies use complimentary brain mapping techniques to understand the brain mechanisms supporting improved movements elicited by external cues. The central hypothesis is that distinct networks are involved in movement improvement depending on characteristics of the facilitating stimulus. Participants will perform movement tasks during recording of brain activity with EEG and MRI. The identified biomarkers may provide targets for future neuromodulation therapies to improve symptoms that are refractory to current treatments, such as freezing of gait.

Detailed description

The studies proposed here test the overarching hypothesis that different types of cues (visual targets, rhythmic auditory stimuli and reward incentives) facilitate movement through distinct neuroanatomic circuits and electrophysiological mechanisms, by leveraging known variability in behavioral cueing benefits across patients. Aim 1 is to demonstrate behavioral dissociations between different forms of movement facilitation within patients and relate variability in cueing benefits to integrity of dissociable neuroanatomic circuits as measured by resting state and diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Aim 2 is to characterize the electrophysiological correlates of behavioral benefits for the different cue types using electroencephalography (EEG). Patients will perform two computer tasks involving reaching and tapping movements during video recording of movements and electrophysiological recording of brain signals. Experimental manipulations involve different computer stimuli that manipulate the presence or absence of sensory and motivational movement cues. The same experimental manipulations are delivered to all individual subjects. 60 patients with Parkinson's disease and 30 healthy controls will perform the task during recording of brain waves from the scalp (EEG) and return for a second session to record brain activity with MRI. Each of the total of 2 sessions will last about 1.5 hours. Patients may be asked to delay taking their morning Parkinson's disease medications and perform clinical rating scales and questionnaires and undergo a movement disorders neurological exam.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALMovement taskComputer task with experimental conditions manipulating sensory and motivation cues for movement.

Timeline

Start date
2022-07-06
Primary completion
2026-09-01
Completion
2026-09-01
First posted
2022-01-05
Last updated
2026-01-07

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05179187. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.