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RecruitingNCT05487664

RM1 Project 2 - tAN fMRI

Determining the Independent and Synergistic Effects of Transcutaneous Auricular Neurostimulation (tAN) on Direct Brain Activation in Healthy Individuals

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
96 (estimated)
Sponsor
Medical University of South Carolina · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

In this one-visit, randomized, double-blind, sham-controlled trial, we plan to use a novel concurrent transcutaneous auricular neurostimulation (tAN) paradigm during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) paradigm in 96 individuals to determine whether tAN administered to two cranial nerves simultaneously produces greater neurophysiologic effects than stimulating solely to the auricular branch of the vagus nerve (ABVN) or the auriculotemporal nerve (ATN; branch of trigeminal nerve) alone. Within the MRI scanner, each participant will be connected to a series of electrodes that stimulate 4 targets (ABVN only, ATN only, ABVN plus ATN, and Sham).

Detailed description

The demand for chronic pain treatment has demonstrated an unprecedented increase over the last several decades, in part contributing to an unsustainable surge in opioid prescriptions. Countless patients were escalated to prolonged, high-dose opioid regimens over years of treatment. By 2014, 5.4% of US adults were estimated to use prescription opioids on a long-term basis. As the harms of opioid proliferation became increasingly clear, a dramatic paradigm shift occurred in which these drugs came to be seen as often more dangerous than beneficial for chronic pain. New clinical guidelines highlighted the risks of high-dose regimens as well as limited benefits, particularly insufficient analgesia, associated with long-term use. According to this new perspective, the preferred therapeutic modality for many patients is to significantly reduce, or even completely stop, using opioids. Stimulation of the ABVN has demonstrated additional benefits for reducing the need for opioids for pain as well as lessening opioid withdrawal symptoms. Clinical trials of ABVN stimulation as an adjunctive treatment for pain have noted decreased intake of tramadol , remifentanil, morphine, as well as naproxen plus tramadol. A pioneering study of electrical stimulation at the cymba conchae in eight persons with opioid use disorder found significantly reduced withdrawal symptoms: first, decreases in anxiety, craving for opioids, chills, nausea; second, reduced bone and joint pain. Results in follow-up clinical trials bolstered the efficacy of ABVN stimulation for opioid withdrawal . More recently, an open-label trial of simultaneous ABVN and trigeminal stimulation found reduced withdrawal symptoms and decreased need for morphine maintenance in newborns with neonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome . This method of simultaneous vagal and trigeminal stimulation via the external ear is known as transcutaneous auricular neurostimulation (tAN), as the targets of electrical stimulation include the ABVN and auriculotemporal nerve (ATN), which is a branch of the mandibular division of the trigeminal nerve. Electrodes applied to select dermatome regions can target ear neural structures and deliver non-invasive vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) and trigeminal nerve stimulation (TNS). See Figure 1. Use of tAN devices for pain relief is an attractive alternative to pharmacologic and opioid-based approaches because it is safe and effective and presents no addiction liability. In order to increase clinical adoption and optimize efficacy of these devices, the mechanism of action must be fully characterized. This study is investigating the mechanism behind tAN in a healthy cohort. Using tAN combined with advanced neuroimaging, we hope to begin to understand what parts of the brain are activated during tAN, compared to sham.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICETranscutaneous Auricular Neruostimulation (tAN)The intervention we are studying is called transcutaneous auricular neurostimulation (tAN). tAN is simply electrical nerve stimulation administered at the ear which targets both the auricular branch of the vagus nerve (ABVN) and the auriculotemporal nerve (ATN, a branch of the trigeminal nerve).

Timeline

Start date
2023-03-17
Primary completion
2027-01-01
Completion
2027-10-01
First posted
2022-08-04
Last updated
2025-12-18

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05487664. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.