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Overnight TI in TLE
Sponsor: Duke University
Summary
The goal of this clinical trial is to gauge whether overnight, non-invasive temporal interference (TI) stimulation aimed at the hippocampus can reduce abnormal brain activity linked to seizures and improve sleep in adults with drug-resistant temporal lobe epilepsy. The main questions are: Does overnight TI stimulation lower seizure-related EEG activity during sleep? Does overnight TI stimulation improve sleep quality and sleep patterns measured overnight in the lab? Researchers will compare each participant's nights without stimulation to nights with active stimulation, and will also look at a night after stimulation ends to see whether any changes last. Participants will: Stay in-lab for six days for overnight sleep and EEG monitoring Have one night of monitoring without stimulation Receive TI stimulation during sleep for several nights Have another night of monitoring without stimulation after the stimulation nights Complete brief questionnaires and thinking/memory tasks before and after the stimulation nights Be checked for side effects and comfort during the study and at follow-up
Official title: Overnight Temporal Interference Stimulation of Bilateral Hippocampi to Reduce Epileptogenic Biomarkers and Improve Sleep in Temporal Lobe Epilepsy
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 70 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
20
Start Date
2026-05-01
Completion Date
2026-06-15
Last Updated
2026-03-18
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Non-invasive Temporal Interference (TI) Stimulation Targeting Bilateral Hippocampi
Non-invasive temporal interference (TI) electrical stimulation delivered overnight to target the bilateral hippocampi during in-laboratory polysomnography and scalp EEG monitoring. Stimulation is applied via a multi-channel, current-controlled stimulator using a scalp electrode montage planned with MRI-guided modeling. TI is delivered continuously from lights-off to lights-on for three consecutive nights, with gradual ramp-up and ramp-down at the start and end of each session. Stimulation parameters use kilohertz carrier currents arranged to produce an amplitude-modulated envelope at 130 Hz at each hippocampal target, with current adjusted within preset safety limits based on tolerability and impedance.
Locations (1)
Anphy Lab - Inside Hock Plaza
Durham, North Carolina, United States