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IPRP Repeated Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS)
Sponsor: University of Calgary
Summary
Severe chronic pain is defined as pain persisting for three months or more that significantly impacts daily functioning. It is highly prevalent, occurring in 100,000 to 160,000 youth. If left unmanaged it can lead to persistent pain and mental health problems in adulthood, posing enormous costs to society ($7.2 billion CAD/year). In 2014, health professionals at the Alberta Children's Hospital (ACH) established a pediatric Intensive Pain Rehabilitation Program (IPRP) to target youth with severe chronic pain and consequent functional disability who do not respond to outpatient pain therapies. The IPRP at the ACH is a three-week intensive day-treatment intervention provided by an interdisciplinary team, which helps youth resume engagement in normal daily functioning. Following IPRP, youth reported less anxiety, less depressive symptoms, and greater function, although their self-reported pain remained unchanged. In August 2016, the investigators began to explore brain areas related to severe chronic pain in youth. The investigators scanned a subset of youth at the start (baseline) and end (discharge) of IPRP (23 youth with 2 brain scans). From baseline to discharge, the investigators saw decreases in activity in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC). Decrease in DLPFC activity was related to better mental health outcomes. The DLPFC is a well-known target for non-invasive brain stimulation. Repeated brain stimulation has been used to treat adults, but not youth with chronic pain. For the first time, the investigators will use image-guided brain stimulation (37 minutes/day, 5 days/week) to enhance the brain changes observed with IPRP. The investigators will examine whether three weeks of brain stimulation helps to reduce pain symptoms in youth. The investigators will also compare pain, brain, and mental health outcomes to our historical program data. By adding brain stimulation to our pain intervention, the investigators have the chance to target an area of the brain investigators know to be altered by chronic pain to improve outcomes.
Official title: Can Brain Stimulation Enhance Outcomes Associated With Intensive Rehabilitation for Youth With Chronic Pain?
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
10 Years - 18 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
25
Start Date
2020-10-19
Completion Date
2026-10
Last Updated
2022-05-17
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Repeated Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS)
rTMS will be applied at 10 Hz. Each train will consist of 40 supra threshold (120% resting motor threshold) pulses over 4 seconds with an inter-train interval of 26 seconds. Treatment sessions will last 37.5 minutes (75 trains/3,000 pulses), and occur at the same time of day on every weekday for a period of three weeks (15 days total). During TMS, only passive activities will be allowed (i.e., watching movies or TV, listening to music). Three weeks of treatment was selected based on existing rTMS evidence in youth with treatment resistant major depressive disorder.
Intensive Pain Rehabilitation Program (IPRP)
The paediatric Intensive Pain Rehabilitation Program (IPRP) in Canada was established to target youth with severe chronic pain and consequent functional disability who do not respond to standard outpatient pain therapies. The IPRP at the Alberta Children's Hospital (ACH) involves three- to six-weeks of day-treatment rehabilitation, provided by an interdisciplinary team (e.g. Psychology, Physiotherapy, Family Therapy). This rehabilitative program teaches self-management strategies with the goal of helping youth and their families resume normal daily functioning.
Locations (1)
University of Calgary
Calgary, Alberta, Canada