Causal Lesion Network Guided Treatment of Bipolar Mania With Transcranial Electrical Stimulation
Part of paid clinical trials in Boston, Massachusetts.
- Sponsor
- Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
- Study ID
- NCT05445466
- Status
- Completed
Conditions
- Bipolar Disorder
- Schizo Affective Disorder
Eligibility Criteria
- Sex
- ALL
- Age
- 18 Years - 65 Years
- Healthy Volunteers
- Not accepted
Interventions
- High-Definition Transcranial Electrical-Current Stimulation — DEVICENon-frequency dependent transcranial electrical stimulation condition for 5 days of twice a day treatment
- High-Definition Transcranial Alternate-Current Stimulation — DEVICEActive-control stimulation condition will target alpha (10 Hz) for 5 days of twice a day treatment
- High-Definition Personalized Beta-Gamma Electrical Stimulation — DEVICEPersonalized beta-gamma electrical stimulation for 5 days of twice a day treatment
Study Details
Mania is a core symptom of bipolar disorder involving periods of euphoria. Decreased inhibitory control, increased risk-taking behaviors, and aberrant reward processing are some of the more recognized symptoms of bipolar disorder and are included in the diagnostic criteria for mania. Current drug therapies for mania are frequently intolerable, ineffective, and carry significant risk for side effects. Presently there are no neurobiologically informed therapies that treat or prevent mania. However, using a newly validated technique termed lesion network mapping, researchers demonstrated that focal brain lesions having a causal role in the development of mania in people without a psychiatric history can occur in different brain locations, such as the right orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), and right inferior temporal gyrus (ITG). This lesion network evidence converges with existing cross-sectional and longitudinal observations in bipolar mania that have identified specific disruptions in network communication between the amygdala and ventro-lateral prefrontal cortex. The OFC is associated with inhibitory control, risk-taking behavior, and reward learning which are major components of bipolar mania. Thus, the association between OFC with mania symptoms, inhibitory control, risk-taking behavior, and reward processing suggests that this region could be targeted using non-invasive brain stimulation.
Key Dates
- Start date
- Dec 16, 2022
- Status verified
- Oct 2025
- Primary completion
- Jun 1, 2025
- Completion
- Jun 1, 2025
Study Design
- Enrollment
- 14 participants (actual)
- Allocation
- RANDOMIZED
- Intervention model
- PARALLEL
- Primary purpose
- TREATMENT
Arms
- Active Comparator: HD-tDCSHD-tDCS; Two, twenty-minute sessions of tDCS to the OFC for 5 days (10 total sessions)
- Active Comparator: HD-tACS (alpha, 10 Hz)10 Hz HD-tACS; Two, twenty-minute sessions of tACS to the OFC for 5 days (10 total sessions).
- Active Comparator: Personalized Beta-Gamma HD-tACSPersonalized HD-tACS; Two, twenty-minute sessions of tACS to the OFC for 5 days (10 total sessions).
Primary Outcome Measure
Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS) [ Time Frame: Change from baseline to 5 Day follow-up ]
Locations (1)
| Facility | City | State | ZIP | Site coordinators |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center | Boston | Massachusetts | 02215 | - |
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