MedPath

Examining the Effects of Reduced Environmental Stimulation on Anxiety

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Generalized Anxiety Disorder
Agoraphobia
Panic Disorder
Major Depressive Disorder
PostTraumatic Stress Disorder
Social Anxiety Disorder
Interventions
Behavioral: Comparison
Behavioral: Floating
Registration Number
NCT03051074
Lead Sponsor
Laureate Institute for Brain Research, Inc.
Brief Summary

The studies proposed in this protocol aim to explore the anxiolytic properties of floating as it relates to the central and autonomic nervous system.

Detailed Description

The human brain is constantly bombarded with sensory information from the external world. This series of studies aim to explore the effects of reducing environmental stimulation using specially designed floatation pools that minimize visual, auditory, tactile, proprioceptive, and thermal input to the brain. Previous research has shown that "floating" in this unique setting can significantly reduce levels of anxiety, stress, blood pressure, and cortisol, while significantly increasing levels of both subjective and physiological forms of relaxation. Much of this past research contained various methodological weaknesses, including small sample sizes and lack of a control condition. Moreover, very little is known about the potential benefits of floating in clinical populations, and essentially nothing is known about the effects of floating on the brain. The studies proposed in this protocol aim to further explore floating's potentially salubrious effect on the autonomic nervous system, while beginning to investigate its largely unknown effect on the central nervous system. The researchers have attempted to improve upon the weaknesses of past research by using larger sample sizes and a control condition. The current project is focused on documenting the subjective, physiological and neural effects of floating in healthy and anxious populations. The subjective effects of floating will be examined using self-report measures and the experience sampling method. The physiological effects of floating will be examined using waterproof and wireless tracking of blood pressure, heart rate, respiration, and movement, in addition to collecting measures of cortisol and magnesium. The neural effects of floating will be examined using waterproof and wireless EEG collected during the float experience, as well as using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) collected before and immediately after floating. An exteroceptive control condition aims to examine each participant's baseline physiological state while participants watch a neutral documentary film. This program of research constitutes the first systematic investigation of floating on the body and the brain, and the findings have the potential to illuminate the physiological and neural correlates of the relaxation response induced by the floating experience.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
60
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria
  1. Has any of the following DSM-V disorders:

    1. Schizophrenia Spectrum and Other Psychotic Disorders
    2. Bipolar and Related Disorders
  2. Is currently being treated for their psychiatric condition as an inpatient

  3. Active suicidal ideation with intent or plan

  4. Participant is morbidly obese (BMI > 40) or underweight (BMI < 17).

  5. Certain drugs or medications consumed within the past week including any psychoactive drugs (e.g., MDMA, LSD, psilocybin, peyote, phencyclidine, ketamine). For all other medications, the participant will be required to be stably medicated prior to participation (defined as having taken the medication for 6 weeks or longer).

  6. Participant has a history of unstable liver or renal insufficiency; glaucoma; diabetes; significant and unstable cardiac, vascular, pulmonary, gastrointestinal, endocrine, neurologic, hematologic, rheumatologic, or metabolic disturbance; or any other condition that, in the opinion of the investigator, would make participation not be in the best interest (e.g., compromise the well-being) of the subject or that could prevent, limit, or confound the protocol-specified assessments.

  7. Pregnancy as detected by a urine test.

  8. Non-correctable vision or hearing problems.

  9. Unwillingness or inability to complete any of the major aspects of the study protocol. However, failing to complete some individual aspects will be acceptable (e.g., being unwilling to answer individual items on a questionnaire).

  10. MRI contraindications including: cardiac pacemaker, metal fragments in eyes/skin/body (shrapnel), aortic/aneurysm clips, prosthesis, by-pass surgery/coronary artery clips, hearing aid, heart valve replacement, shunt (ventricular or spinal), electrodes, metal plates/pins/screws/ wires, or neuro/bio-stimulators (TENS unit), persons who have ever been a professional metal worker/welder, history of eye surgery/eyes washed out because of metal, vision problems uncorrectable with lenses, inability to lie still on one's back for 60-120 minutes; prior neurosurgery; tattoos or cosmetic makeup with metal dyes, unwillingness to remove body piercings, and pregnancy.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
CROSSOVER
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Comparison conditionComparisonThe participant will watch a relaxing 90 minute film as a comparison condition
FloatingFloatingThe participant will float supine in water with a high concentration of Epsom salt for up to 90 minutes on three separate occasions
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Spielberger State Anxiety Inventory (STAI-S) change scoreThe investigators will calculate the pre- to post-float change score following each session (up to 3 float sessions + 1 comparison session completed over a 1 year time period; each session will be spaced apart by a minimum of 7 days)

A valid and reliable psychological inventory consisting of 20 self-report items pertaining to state anxiety. The investigators will calculate pre- to post-float change scores.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Heart rate variability changes during the float experienceThese measures will be acquired during the 2nd and 3rd float sessions + comparison session completed over a 1 year time period, with each session spaced apart by a minimum of 7 days
Bioassay changes in magnesium, sulfate, cortisol, and inflammatory markersSamples will be acquired before and after the 2nd and 3rd float sessions + comparison session completed over a 1 year time period, with each session spaced apart by a minimum of 7 days

Blood and urine samples

Blood pressure changes during the float experienceThese measures will be acquired during the 2nd float session and comparison session, with each session spaced apart by a minimum of 7 days
Subjective changes in emotion and moodSelf-report measures acquired before and after each session (3 float sessions + comparison session completed over a 1 year time period, with each session spaced apart by a minimum of 7 days)

Examining pre- to post-float change scores on various self-report measures (e.g., PANAS-X)

EEG changes during the float experienceEEG will be acquired during the 2nd and 3rd float sessions + comparison session completed over a 1 year time period, with each session spaced apart by a minimum of 7 days
Brain activation and connectivity changes from pre- to post-float as measured with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)fMRI will be acquired immediately before and after the 3rd float session (completed over a 1 day time period)

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Laureate Institute for Brain Research

🇺🇸

Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath