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Not Yet RecruitingNCT06953388

Understanding Non-invasive Vagus Nerve Stimulation Effects in PTSD

SPARK-VNS: Facilitating Adaptive Posttraumatic Processing With Non-Invasive Vagus Nerve Stimulation

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
60 (estimated)
Sponsor
Wayne State University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The goal of this study is to determine how non-invasive brain stimulation (delivered through the ear called vagus nerve stimulation) affects fear learning processes in people who have experienced psychological trauma. To answer these questions, we measure bodily responses (heart rate, sweat, startle) and questionnaires. The main questions it aims to answer are: Does non-invasive vagus nerve stimulation help reduce anxious arousal? Does non-invasive vagus nerve stimulation help dampen learned fear?

Detailed description

This study aims to determine how non-invasive brain stimulation (delivered through the ear) affects learning processes. During this study, participants who have experienced a trauma will be asked to complete surveys and come to the lab for about 7 hours across four lab visits. Researchers will measure body responses (heart rate, skin conductance, startle), while the ear is stimulated. Participants also will be asked to complete a startle task. The study is at the Wayne State University Tolan Park Research Clinic. Participants will be compensated for their time. To be eligible, participants must be 18-70 years old, have experienced or witnessed a traumatic event, be able to commit 7 hours of time to the study, and be able to wear sensors on their hands, arms, and head and sit quietly at a computer. Aim 1. Establish feasibility and acceptability of taVNS in a diverse sample of Detroit metro residents with symptoms of posttraumatic stress. It is hypothesized that taVNS delivery will be feasible and acceptable for individuals with trauma exposure and PTS symptoms, and that there will be no difference in acceptability/tolerability between the active and sham conditions. Aim 2. Establish the effects of active versus sham taVNS on physiological indicators during fear extinction. It is hypothesized that active compared to sham taVNS will a) result in facilitation of fear extinction, and b) show greater modulation of physiological responding. Exploratory Aim: Data will be explored for individual differences (affective blunting, hyperarousal, impaired discrimination of conditioned stimuli) which moderate taVNS effects. This proposed project will determine how taVNS delivered at higher doses than have been previously administered influence the course of adaptive posttraumatic processing in a sample with trauma exposure, while evaluating the psychophysiological profile in multiple contexts.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEtranscutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulationFDA-cleared Digitimer DS7A Constant Current Stimulator (Digitimer Ltd., USA) will deliver electrical stimulation for 60 mins. Active stimulation will consist of direct electrical stimulation to the inner side of the left tragus (anode on the cymba concha, cathode on the surface of the tragus), thereby stimulating the ABVN. Stimulation parameters will consist of 500μs pulse width, 25Hz frequency, delivered at 200% of each participant's individual perceptual threshold (PT) in 60sec on/off trains.
DEVICEsham transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulationFDA-cleared Digitimer DS7A Constant Current Stimulator (Digitimer Ltd., USA) will deliver electrical stimulation for 60 mins. Sham will be delivered to the ear lobe. Stimulation parameters will consist of 500μs pulse width, 25Hz frequency, delivered at 200% of each participant's individual perceptual threshold (PT) in 60sec on/off trains.

Timeline

Start date
2026-02-01
Primary completion
2031-01-01
Completion
2032-12-01
First posted
2025-05-01
Last updated
2025-05-18

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06953388. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.