Somatosensory Processing in Focal Hand Dystonia
NCT00579033 · Status: UNKNOWN · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 24
Last updated 2007-12-21
Summary
Patients with focal dystonia experience uncontrollable movements of the hand during certain types of skilled movements. Though the origin of the disorder is not fully understood, it is thought that brain areas involved in moving the hands and receiving touch information from the hands, are involved. For example, patients with dystonia affecting the hand show changes in their ability to perceive touch - this is something that typically escapes the patients own awareness. Further, the area of the brain receiving touch information has a disrupted representation of the finger skin surfaces.
The goal of our research is to improve dystonia symptoms in patients with hand dystonia. We will attempt to achieve this goal by implementing an intensive training treatment that requires patients to attend to, and use touch information applied to specific fingertips. Previous work has attempted to alter touch perception using sensory training and improvements in motor control (hand writing) of dystonia patients were observed. For example, learning to read Braille improves tactile perception and handwriting in focal hand dystonia. A different approach to treat focal hand dystonia involves a technique called repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS), and this can also temporarily improve hand writing in dystonia patients. The proposed research will attempt to alter touch processing using touch training alone, or in combination with rTMS. Rather than train using Braille reading, the sensory training will be applied using a systematic, experimenter controlled stimulus set that focuses on touch stimuli applied to individual digits. Importantly patients will have to associate certain types of touch information with rewards and other touch input with the lack of a reward.
The study will first involve measuring the location and representation of the touch in the brain using multiple brain mapping tools. These tools include functional magnetic resonance imaging and magnetoencephalography; when both tools are used a very accurate picture of finger representation can be obtained, and we also know what brain areas respond to touch stimuli. Dystonia symptoms and touch perception will also be assessed. Next, patients will participate in a training intervention that involves 15 days(2.5 hr/day) of touch training applied to the fingertips of the dystonia affected hand. Patients will identify the touch targets amongst distractors and receive on-line performance feedback. The goal of the training is to provide the cortex with regular boundaries of fingers and in this way, attempt to re-shape the sensory cortex to accept these boundaries. Another group of patients will receive rTMS. The goal of the rTMS is to create an environment in sensory cortex that is open or 'ready' to accept changes induced by tactile stimulation. The rTMS will be immediately followed by the tactile training. A third group of patients will receive a placebo version of rTMS followed by tactile training. The latter group will allow us to understand if rTMS has a definite effect on the physiology of the patient. Following the 15-day training, we will assess the brains representation of fingertips, changes in dystonia symptoms and changes in the perception of touch stimuli.
This research will advance the treatment of focal hand dystonia and assist the design of precise remediation training tailored to the dystonia patient.
Conditions
- Focal Hand Dystonia
- Musician's Dystonia
- Writer's Cramp
- Dystonic Cramp
Interventions
- OTHER
-
Tactile training + sham rTMS
tactile training for 2.5/hr/day for 15 days - this plus the sham rTMS
- OTHER
-
Tactile training + rTMS
tactile training 2.5/hr/day for 15 days plus daily 5Hz rTMS
Sponsors & Collaborators
-
Dystonia Medical Research Foundation
collaborator OTHER -
University Health Network, Toronto
lead OTHER
Principal Investigators
-
Aimee J Nelson, PhD · Toronto Western Research Institute, University of Waterloo
Study Design
- Allocation
- RANDOMIZED
- Purpose
- TREATMENT
- Masking
- SINGLE
- Model
- PARALLEL
Eligibility
- Min Age
- 18 Years
- Sex
- ALL
- Healthy Volunteers
- No
Timeline & Regulatory
- Start
- 2007-05-31
- Completion
- 2008-07-31
Countries
- Canada
Study Locations
More Related Trials
-
Depotentiation in People With Focal Hand Dystonia
NCT02106936 ·Status: TERMINATED
-
Movement-Related Brain Networks Involved in Hand Dystonia
NCT00137384 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Neuromodulation Therapy for Task-Specific Dystonia
NCT06422104 ·Status: COMPLETED ·Phase: NA
-
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation and Electrical Stimulation of Nerves to Study Focal Dystonia
NCT00050024 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Long-Term Motor Learning in Focal Hand Dystonia
NCT00325091 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Accelerated TMS for Focal Hand Dystonia
NCT06015672 ·Status: ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING ·Phase: NA
-
Survey of Sensory and Motor Tricks in Focal Dystonia
NCT00054652 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) Studies of Dystonia
NCT00017875 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Pathophysiology of Focal Hand Dystonia
NCT03223623 ·Status: COMPLETED ·Phase: NA
-
Can Short Latency Afferent Inhibition Give us Clues to Better DYT 1 Dystonia Treatments?
NCT01435681 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Surround Inhibition in Patients With Dystonia
NCT00029601 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Brain Function in Focal Dystonia
NCT00102999 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
fMRI Studies of Task Specificity in Focal Hand Dystonia
NCT00310414 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Role of Dopamine Receptors in Primary Focal Dystonias
NCT01373840 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
EEG and EMG Studies of Hand Dystonia
NCT00025701 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Sensorimotor Mapping in Patients With Writer's Cramp
NCT03085745 ·Status: UNKNOWN ·Phase: NA
-
Functional Connectivity in Primary Focal Dystonia
NCT01761903 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Brain Anatomy in Dystonia
NCT00031369 ·Status: TERMINATED
-
Propensity to Develop Plasticity in the Parieto-Motor Networks in Dystonia From the Perspective of Abnormal High-Order Motor Processing
NCT02504905 ·Status: COMPLETED ·Phase: EARLY_PHASE1
-
Brain Networks in Dystonia
NCT03042962 ·Status: RECRUITING
-
Brain Changes in Patients With Focal Hand Dystonia
NCT00306865 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Association Between Focal Dystonia and Complex Regional Pain Syndrome
NCT00595439 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Neurophysiologic Study of Patient With Essential Tremor and Dystonic Tremor
NCT03041714 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Facial Expression Recognition of Emotion and Categorization of Emotional Words in Gilles de la Tourette's Syndrome
NCT00664300 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Accelerating TMS for Cervical Dystonia
NCT06328114 ·Status: ENROLLING_BY_INVITATION ·Phase: NA