Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT07291687

tDCS as Treatment for Motor Function

Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation as a Treatment for Motor Function in Participants Living With Progressive Supranuclear Palsy, Corticalbasal Syndrome Degeneration, or Parkinson's Disease

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
20 (estimated)
Sponsor
Baycrest · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Previous preliminary results are sufficiently impressive to suggest that tDCS stimulation does have the potential to improve motor function when that ability is trained during stimulation. In the proposed study, the investigation will assess whether walking sessions combined with tDCS lead to improvements in motor function: gait, articulation, eye gaze, and motor dexterity. In addition, the investigators wish to examine if such results can be replicated in people with other conditions, such as cortical basal syndrome, and Parkinson's disease.

Detailed description

Previous preliminary results are sufficiently impressive to suggest that tDCS stimulation does have the potential to improve motor function when that ability is trained during stimulation. In the proposed study, the investigators will assess whether walking sessions combined with tDCS lead to improvements in motor function: gait, articulation, eye gaze, and motor dexterity. In addition, the investigators wish to examine if such results can be replicated in people with other conditions, such as cortical basal syndrome, and Parkinson's disease. The rationale for including people living with these conditions is the overlap in motor and cortical network dysfunction observed across these disorders. All three conditions involve impairment of motor initiation, gait, coordination, and executive motor control due to degeneration in frontal-subcortical pathways. This extension will also allow for comparison of stimulation responsiveness across related diagnostic groups and provide insight into disease-specific factors influencing motor recovery potential. Previous tDCS studies have found significant results with sample sizes between 10-20 participants for a two-round study comparing training sessions with real tDCS versus sessions done without tDCS. However, the investigators plan to recruit 30 participants living with each condition as this will allow us to examine results per group, but also how the individual groups compare.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICETranscranial direct current stimulation (TDCS)The Crossover design will enable us to use each participant as their own control.
DEVICEStimulation ArmParticipants will be exposed to the brain stimulation protocol while undergoing certain motor task during the training sessions.

Timeline

Start date
2025-10-30
Primary completion
2028-12-01
Completion
2030-12-01
First posted
2025-12-18
Last updated
2025-12-18

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07291687. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.