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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT07680114
NA

Overnight Thalamic TES-TI to Modulate Sleep Spindles in Individuals With Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders and Matched Healthy Controls

Sponsor: University of Wisconsin, Madison

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

This study to find out whether a type of non-invasive electrical brain stimulation called transcranial electrical stimulation with temporal interference (TES-TI) can temporarily change brain activity during sleep-especially sleep spindles (brain rhythms in the \~8-16 Hz range). The investigators are focusing on the thalamus, a deep brain region that helps coordinate brain activity during non-REM sleep. Sleep spindles are often reduced in schizophrenia, so this study is to see whether TES-TI can change spindle activity in individuals with schizophrenia spectrum disorders (SSD) and in healthy adults. To study this, a structural MRI scan will be used to customize where the stimulation electrodes are placed, and then TES-TI will be applied during one of two overnight sleep lab visits while brain activity is recorded with high-density EEG and standard sleep sensors. The other overnight is a baseline/control night during which only sham stimulation is delivered. The goal is to determine whether TES-TI during sleep can increase spindle-frequency activity in this population.

Official title: A Pilot Feasibility Study of Overnight Thalamic TES-TI to Modulate Sleep Spindles in Individuals With Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders and Matched Healthy Controls

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 50 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

20

Start Date

2026-08

Completion Date

2027-12

Last Updated

2026-07-02

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Conditions

Interventions

DEVICE

TES-TI

During the stimulation night, TES-TI will be delivered during stable N2 sleep in 3-minute epochs separated by 6-minute intervals, with up to 20 protocols per night, using randomized 10 Hz, 14 Hz, and carrier-only control conditions under continuous sleep-technician monitoring.

DEVICE

Sham TES-TI

ramp-sham stimulation only

Locations (1)

University of Wisconsin

Madison, Wisconsin, United States