MedPath

Neurofeedback With Real-Time fMRI for Treatment of PTSD

Not Applicable
Withdrawn
Conditions
PTSD
Interventions
Device: fMRI - GE Medical System
Registration Number
NCT03243149
Lead Sponsor
Duke University
Brief Summary

PTSD is a debilitating and costly condition and currently available treatment options have risks and limitations that necessitate development of novel interventions. Collectively, the functional brain imaging reports suggest that patients with PTSD, especially those with the re-experiencing and hypervigilence phenotype, show ventromedial PFC hypoactivation and amygdala hyperactivation in response to symptom provocation, and that treatment, when successful is associated with reduced amygdala and increased ventromedial PFC activation. This project is guided by a neurocircuit model of PTSD dysfunction in which abnormalities in fronto-limbic imbalance, which diminishes capacity for fear extinction learning, and produces PTSD symptoms of re-experiencing and hyperarousal. Thus, our studies aim to bridge the translational gap between theoretical and neurobiological models of PTSD to implementation of clinical practice. The Target Engagement and Dosing Phase of this project, which is a pilot study, will demonstrate target engagement and its association with laboratory measures of PTSD-relevant neural processes.

Detailed Description

The proposed treatment is expected to reduce symptoms of PTSD particularly re-experiencing and hyperarousal symptoms. These improvements in symptoms are expected to translate into improved social and occupational function for subjects with PTSD.

Specific Aim 1: The investigators will test (1) the efficacy of neurofeedback in subjects with PTSD attempting to upregulate ventral medial PFC and simultaneously downregulate amygdala, and (2) determine the number of neurofeedback sessions (dose) needed for target engagement and transfer. Prior to the neurofeedback training, participants' baseline ability to regulate in the absence of neurofeedback from real-time fMRI will be ascertained. Then during session, participants will receive veridical real-time feedback in the scanner indicating the activation level of ventromedial PFC minus amygdala. Participants will attempt to regulate to achieve a predetermined target level known to the participant. Neurofeedback conditions will include (1) false feedback (sham) shows a thermometer that indicates false feedback consisting of noise, (2) view condition shows a thermometer that indicates true activation of ventromedial PFC minus amygdala but the participant is asked not to attempt neuroregulation, (3) free regulate shows a thermometer that indicates true activation of ventromedial PFC minus amygdala while the participant attempts neuroregulation. The investigators will enroll 10 participants who will engage in a six weekly neurofeedback sessions to assess target engagement and dosing.

Specific Aim 2: The ability for participants to regulate will be further challenged by explicit exposure to trauma relevant stimuli that elicit increased amygdala activation in patients with PTSD. The investigators will follow the same procedure as the previous aim except that free regulate condition (condition #3) will be replaced with conditions (4) trauma regulate shows a participant-specific trauma-relevant image and the thermometer that indicates true activation of ventromedial PFC minus amygdala while the participant attempts neuroregulation, and (5) neutral regulate shows a trauma-unrelated image and the thermometer that indicates true activation of ventromedial PFC minus amygdala while the participant attempts neuroregulation. The investigators will enroll 10 participants who will engage in a six weekly neurofeedback sessions to assess target engagement and dosing.

Participants will be assessed for PTSD and related symptoms before and after to the 6-week intervention using the Clinician Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS) (Appendix XVI) and Beck Depression Inventory (BDI-II) (Appendix IX). The investigators hypothesize enhanced neuroregulation and transfer will be associated with a concomitant reduction in PTSD severity and lower comorbid anxiety symptoms.

Specific Aim 3: Participants will be assessed before and after the 6-week intervention with a brief neurocognitive battery of episodic memory, working memory, executive function, and sustained attention. The investigators hypothesize that successful neuroregulation and transfer will be associated with concomitant cognitive performance improvements.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
WITHDRAWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
Not specified
Inclusion Criteria
  • Fluent in English and capable of informed consent
  • free of implanted metal objects
  • 18-50 years of age
  • Antidepressant sleep and anti-anxiety medication use is permitted
Read More
Exclusion Criteria
  • Claustrophobia
  • Neurological disorders, History of learning disability or developmental delay
  • Current substance abuse or history of substance dependence
  • Psychotic disorders
  • Significant medical conditions
  • Current suicidality or attempt within the previous year
  • History of neurological injury or disease
  • Pregnancy
  • Major Axis 1 Psychiatric Disorders (exceptions are unipolar depression, past substance abuse, current or past nicotine dependence)
  • Metal in the body
Read More

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
False FeedbackfMRI - GE Medical SystemNeurofeedback from real-time acquired images (fMRI - GE Medical System) will be shown to subjects. False feedback (sham) shows a thermometer that indicates false feedback consisting of noise.
View ConditionfMRI - GE Medical SystemNeurofeedback from real-time acquired images (fMRI - GE Medical System) will be shown to subjects. View condition shows a thermometer that indicates true activation of ventromedial PFC minus amygdala but the participant is asked not to attempt neuroregulation.
Free RegulatefMRI - GE Medical SystemNeurofeedback from real-time acquired images (fMRI - GE Medical System) will be shown to subjects. Free regulate shows a thermometer that indicates true activation of ventromedial PFC minus amygdala while the participant attempts neuroregulation.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in MRI Imaging AcquisitionBaseline scan (week 1), week 2, week 3, week 4, week 5 and week 6.

fMRI scans will use a 3T GE scanner at the Duke-UNC Brain Imaging and Analysis Center. Structural MRI data and functional MRI data that includes real-time feedback on the participants brain activity will be made available to the participant to facilitate self-regulation.

Participants will begin and end each scanning session with a 6-minute resting-state scan. The purpose of the first resting-state run is collect pre-Training baseline resting-state activation and to acclimate the subject to the scanner environment prior to neuroregulatory training. The purpose of the second resting state run is examine changes in functional connectivity after compared to before real-time fMRI neurofeedback.

To determine the effect of session on subject ability to increases ventromedial prefrontal cortex activation and decrease amygdala activation and establish a dose-response relationship for neuroregulation, we will measure changes in BOLD signal across scan sessions.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in psychophysiological dataBaseline scan (week 1), week 2, week 3, week 4, week 5 and week 6.

Physiological measures of heart rate and respiration will be recorded during each scan, using an MR-safe commercial system (MP-150 BIOPAC systems, Goleta, CA) to permit removal of physiological noise from the fMRI signal. To evaluate potential scalable non-fMRI correlates, we will also acquire pupillometry using an MR-compatible camera (Arrington Research, Inc.) and galvanic skin conductance levels to identify fear or anxiety responses that impede self-activation.

To determine the effect of session on subject ability to regulate stress through neurofeedback, we will measure changes in psychophysiological data across scan sessions.

Change in Clinician Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS) Severity ScoreBaseline, 6 weeks

Participants will be assessed for current and lifetime PTSD twice, once at the beginning and once at the end of the 6 weeks.

Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II)Baseline

Diagnostic assessment for PTSD and comorbid symptoms of depression

Deployment Risk and Resilience Inventory-2 (DRRI-2)Baseline

Baseline diagnostic assessment for both risk and resilience.

Combat Exposure Scale (CES)Baseline

Diagnostic assessment for combat exposure.

Drug Abuse Screening Test (DAST)Baseline

Diagnostic assessment for substance use

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Duke University Medical Center

🇺🇸

Durham, North Carolina, United States

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath