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The Underlying Neural Mechanism of TMS in Improving the Imbalance of "Microbiota-brain-gut Axis" in Alzheimer 's Disease Population
Sponsor: Second Affiliated Hospital of Nanchang University
Summary
What is this study about? This study focuses on Alzheimer's Disease (AD), a common neurodegenerative disease that affects memory, thinking, and daily life. We aim to explore whether a non-invasive treatment called Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS) can improve AD symptoms by regulating the "gut-brain-intestine axis" - a connection between gut bacteria, the brain, and the intestines. Who can participate? * \*\*AD patients\*\*: Aged 50-80, diagnosed with mild to moderate AD (MMSE score 18-27, MoCA score 10-26), with stable condition for at least 6 months, and able to cooperate with tests and treatment. * \*\*Healthy controls\*\*: Aged 50-80, with normal cognitive function (MMSE ≥28, MoCA ≥27), no AD family history, and matched in age and gender with AD patients. Those with epilepsy, severe mental illness, recent use of antibiotics/probiotics, or inability to complete MRI scans are not eligible. What will participants experience? * \*\*AD patients\*\*: Will be randomly divided into two groups. Both groups will receive 4 weeks of treatment (5 days/week) with a helmet-like device. One group gets real rTMS (safe magnetic stimulation to the brain), and the other gets sham stimulation (no effective magnetic field, but same sound/feel). * \*\*Healthy controls\*\*: No treatment, but will complete the same tests as AD patients. * \*\*Tests during the study\*\*: Cognitive assessments (memory, thinking skills via questionnaires), stool/blood sample collection (to check gut bacteria and body markers), and MRI scans (to look at brain structure/function) at baseline, 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, and 1 year. What are the potential benefits? * Free rTMS treatment (for AD patients), free MRI scans (valued at 700 RMB), and a 200 RMB subsidy. * Free health checks (gut bacteria analysis, metabolic tests) and cognitive evaluations to understand personal health status. * Contribution to developing new AD treatments that may help future patients. Is it safe? rTMS is a clinically proven safe technique. Possible mild side effects (headache, scalp irritation) usually go away on their own. Sample collection (stool/blood) and MRI scans are non-invasive or minimally invasive. A professional team will monitor participants throughout to handle any issues. For healthcare providers This is a multicenter, randomized, double-blind sham-controlled study (200 AD patients, 200 healthy controls). The primary goal is to explore rTMS's mechanism via the gut-brain-intestine axis, with MoCA score changes (6 months post-treatment) as the main outcome. It integrates multi-omics and neuroimaging data to provide evidence for AD's non-drug treatment.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
50 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
400
Start Date
2026-04-21
Completion Date
2030-09-30
Last Updated
2026-04-09
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Conditions
Interventions
TMS
For the repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) intervention, the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) is selected as the stimulation target, with a stimulation frequency of 10 Hz; the intervention consists of 20 stimulation trains per day, 5 days per week, using a coil with a diameter of 9 cm, at an intensity of 80% of the motor threshold (minimum single-pulse intensity: 50 μV); each stimulation train lasts for 10 seconds, with an interval of 25 seconds between trains, and 20 trains per day totaling 2000 pulses. The treatment is administered once daily, five times a week, for 4 consecutive weeks, resulting in a total of 20 to 30 sessions, and the traditional "5-centimeter" method is adopted for localizing the DLPFC stimulation target.