Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Effects on Pain Perception

NACompletedINTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment

108

Participants

Timeline

Start Date

February 28, 2005

Primary Completion Date

June 30, 2011

Study Completion Date

June 30, 2011

Conditions
Gastric Bypass Surgery Pain Management
Interventions
DEVICE

Real TMS 45 min

Real TMS 45 minutes after surgery, first determined resting motor threshold (rMT) by starting with 40% of the machine output and 0.5 Hz stimulus frequency. The coil was positioned over the motor cortex and then adjusted until each pulse results in movement of the right thumb. The machine output was then adjusted to the lowest intensity that reliably produces thumb movement. Parameter estimation by sequential testing was used to determine the amount of machine energy necessary to visibly move the thumb 50% of the time. rMT was assessed before each rTMS treatment. The left prefrontal cortex was the cortical target for rTMS treatment. The EEG-10-20 system was used to locate the prefrontal cortex (F3).

DEVICE

Sham TMS 45 min

Sham TMS 45 minutes after surgery used specifically designed rTMS coil that produces auditory signals identical to real (active) TMS coils but is shielded so that actual stimulation does not occur. The eSham system was used to mimic sensations of real rTMS. This system produces mild tingling on the scalp underneath the sham rTMS coil, making it difficult in differentiating between real and sham. The amount of electrical stimulation necessary to match real rTMS pulses was determined using an algorithm (parameter estimation by sequential testing). All subjects underwent the sham titration at the beginning of every rTMS session regardless of group assignment. The left prefrontal cortex was the cortical target for rTMS treatment, located using the EEG-10-20 system.

DEVICE

Real TMS 4 Hours

Real TMS 4 hours after surgery, first determined resting motor threshold (rMT) by starting with 40% of the machine output and 0.5 Hz stimulus frequency. The coil was positioned over the motor cortex and then adjusted until each pulse results in movement of the right thumb. The machine output was then adjusted to the lowest intensity that reliably produces thumb movement. Parameter estimation by sequential testing was used to determine the amount of machine energy necessary to visibly move the thumb 50% of the time. rMT was assessed before each rTMS treatment. The left prefrontal cortex was the cortical target for rTMS treatment. The EEG-10-20 system was used to locate the prefrontal cortex (F3).

DEVICE

Sham TMS 4 Hours

Sham TMS 4 hours after surgery used specifically designed rTMS coil that produces auditory signals identical to real (active) TMS coils but is shielded so that actual stimulation does not occur. The eSham system was used to mimic sensations of real rTMS. This system produces mild tingling on the scalp underneath the sham rTMS coil, making it difficult in differentiating between real and sham. The amount of electrical stimulation necessary to match real rTMS pulses was determined using an algorithm (parameter estimation by sequential testing). All subjects underwent the sham titration at the beginning of every rTMS session regardless of group assignment. The left prefrontal cortex was the cortical target for rTMS treatment, located using the EEG-10-20 system.

Trial Locations (1)

29425-5712

Institute of Psychiatry Brain Stimulation lab, Charleston

All Listed Sponsors
lead

Medical University of South Carolina

OTHER

NCT01861574 - Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Effects on Pain Perception | Biotech Hunter | Biotech Hunter