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NCT05881460: Vibrotactile Coordinated Reset for Parkinson's Disease
Executive Summary
Vibrotactile Coordinated Reset (vCR) therapy represents a revolutionary approach to Parkinson's disease treatment through non-invasive neuromodulation. This Phase 1/2 clinical trial (NCT05881460) evaluates a novel wearable device that delivers patterned vibrotactile stimulation to the wrist to desynchronize pathological neural oscillations associated with Parkinson's disease motor symptoms. Developed by Synergic Medical Technologies, this approach represents a significant advancement in closed-loop neuromodulation therapy by providing a non-invasive, ambulatory treatment option that can be used in daily life without surgical intervention["@clinicaltrialsgov"].
Executive Summary
Vibrotactile Coordinated Reset (vCR) therapy represents a revolutionary approach to Parkinson's disease treatment through non-invasive neuromodulation. This Phase 1/2 clinical trial (NCT05881460) evaluates a novel wearable device that delivers patterned vibrotactile stimulation to the wrist to desynchronize pathological neural oscillations associated with Parkinson's disease motor symptoms. Developed by Synergic Medical Technologies, this approach represents a significant advancement in closed-loop neuromodulation therapy by providing a non-invasive, ambulatory treatment option that can be used in daily life without surgical intervention["@clinicaltrialsgov"].
The scientific foundation of vCR therapy rests on the Coordinated Reset (CR) hypothesis, developed by Dr. Peter A. Tass over decades of research. This theory proposes that pathological synchronized neural activity in the basal ganglia-thalamocortical circuit—which underlies the motor symptoms of Parkinson's disease—can be desynchronized through precisely timed sensory stimulation. By delivering carefully designed patterns of vibrotactile stimuli to peripheral sensory receptors, the vCR device aims to reset abnormal neural synchrony patterns and restore more normal motor function["@tass1997"][@tass2012].
Unlike deep brain stimulation (DBS), which requires surgical implantation of electrodes in specific brain targets, vCR operates through a completely non-invasive peripheral stimulation pathway. This approach dramatically reduces risk, simplifies implementation, and enables home-based treatment. The device can be worn as a wristband during daily activities, providing continuous therapeutic benefit without requiring visits to specialized clinics or hospitals["@popovych2016"].
Scientific Background
Pathological Neural Synchronization in Parkinson's Disease
One of the hallmark neurophysiological abnormalities in Parkinson's disease is the emergence of excessive neural synchronization within the basal ganglia-thalamocortical motor circuit. This pathological synchronization manifests as rhythmic oscillatory activity in the beta frequency band (13-35 Hz) that correlates with the severity of motor symptoms[@timmermann2004].
Mechanisms of Pathological Synchronization:
In the healthy motor system, neuronal activity in the basal ganglia is relatively desynchronized, with individual neurons firing independently to encode motor commands. In Parkinson's disease, degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta leads to downstream changes in basal ganglia activity that promote excessive synchronization:
Correlation with Symptoms:
Studies have demonstrated a direct correlation between the strength of beta-band synchronization and the severity of bradykinesia (slowness of movement) and rigidity (stiffness) in Parkinson's disease patients. When patients receive dopaminergic medication or undergo deep brain stimulation, the reduction in beta synchronization often correlates with clinical improvement, suggesting that pathological synchronization is not merely an epiphenomenon but a direct contributor to motor dysfunction[@brown2006].
The Coordinated Reset Hypothesis
The Coordinated Reset (CR) theory, first proposed by Peter Tass in 1997, offers a strategic approach to desynchronizing pathological neural networks[@tass1997]. The fundamental insight underlying CR is that pathological synchronization can be disrupted not by continuous stimulation, but by carefully timed stimulation patterns that "reset" the synchronization pattern of the network.
Principles of Coordinated Reset:
Computational Modeling:
Extensive computational modeling has demonstrated that CR stimulation can desynchronize model neural networks. Key predictions from these models include:
- Desynchronization occurs more rapidly with coordinated stimuli delivered to different network sites
- The effect is cumulative with repeated application
- The desynchronized state can persist after stimulation ceases (lasting effect)
Evidence from Preclinical and Clinical Studies
Animal Studies:
The efficacy of Coordinated Reset was first demonstrated in parkinsonian monkeys. In a landmark 2012 study, Tass and colleagues showed that CR treatment delivered through implanted electrodes in the subthalamic nucleus produced lasting improvements in motor function. Notably, the therapeutic effects persisted for hours to days after stimulation was discontinued, suggesting induction of plastic changes in the neural network[@tass2012].
Human Tinnitus Studies:
Before applying CR to Parkinson's disease, the technique was successfully translated to treat tinnitus, a condition also associated with pathological neural synchronization in auditory pathways. Studies demonstrated that vibrotactile CR therapy could reduce tinnitus severity, validating the approach in human patients and providing safety data supporting translation to neurological applications[@tass2015].
Mechanism of Action
Technical Approach
The vCR device represents a sophisticated implementation of the CR principle specifically designed for Parkinson's disease motor symptoms. The technology combines several innovative elements:
Stimulation Modality:
- Vibrotactile pulses delivered through actuators embedded in a wristband
- Stimuli target cutaneous mechanoreceptors in the wrist skin
- Sensory signals travel through peripheral nerves to the central nervous system
- Algorithmic generation of stimulation patterns based on CR principles
- Patterns designed to counteract the pathological beta synchronization
- Adaptive algorithms that may adjust stimulation based on detected neural states
- Compact wristband form factor enabling continuous wear
- Battery-powered for ambulatory use
- User-friendly interface for treatment delivery
- Designed for use during daily activities including walking and exercise
Neural Pathway of Action
The vCR therapy operates through a well-defined sensory-motor pathway:
This peripheral-to-central pathway enables non-invasive modulation of deep brain structures that would otherwise require surgical intervention to directly access.
Closed-Loop Considerations
Advanced implementations of vCR may incorporate closed-loop elements:
Neural Monitoring:
- Integration with wearable sensors to detect movement patterns
- Detection of tremor or bradykinesia episodes
- Real-time adjustment of stimulation based on symptom state
- Modulation of stimulation parameters based on detected needs
- Intensity adjustment during different activity states
- Potential for personalized treatment algorithms
Clinical Trial Details
Study Overview
| Parameter | Details |
|-----------|---------|
| Trial ID | NCT05881460 |
| Phase | Phase 1/2 |
| Status | Recruiting |
| Sponsor | Synergic Medical Technologies |
| Condition | Parkinson's Disease |
| Intervention | Vibrotactile Coordinated Reset (vCR) Stimulation |
| Study Type | Interventional |
| Allocation | Randomized |
| Masking | Double-blind (participant and assessor) |
Trial Design
The clinical trial employs a rigorous randomized, sham-controlled design to evaluate both safety and efficacy:
Primary Objectives:
- Evaluate safety and tolerability of chronic vCR stimulation
- Determine preliminary efficacy for motor symptoms
- Establish dose-response relationships
- Evaluate effects on quality of life
- Assess long-term treatment sustainability
- Characterize optimal stimulation parameters
- Identify predictors of treatment response
- Evaluate effects on non-motor symptoms
Treatment Arms
| Arm | Description |
|-----|-------------|
| Active vCR | Receive therapeutic vibrotactile stimulation |
| Sham vCR | Receive minimal/placeholder stimulation |
The sham group is essential for distinguishing true treatment effects from placebo responses, which can be substantial in Parkinson's disease trials.
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Diagnosis of idiopathic Parkinson's disease (UK Brain Bank criteria)
- Hoehn & Yahr stage 2-3 (moderate disease)
- Stable dopaminergic medication regimen for ≥4 weeks
- Age 40-80 years
- MMSE score ≥24 (no significant cognitive impairment)
- Able to wear wristband device
- Significant cognitive impairment (MMSE <24, dementia)
- Psychiatric comorbidities (active depression, psychosis)
- Previous deep brain stimulation surgery
- Skin conditions affecting wrist (eczema, psoriasis, wounds)
- Peripheral neuropathy affecting sensation
- Metal allergy (contraindication for device wear)
- Active participation in other clinical trials
Outcome Measures
Primary Endpoints:
- Safety: Adverse event frequency and severity
- Tolerability: Discontinuation rates
- Motor: Change in Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) Part III (Motor)
- Quality of Life: Parkinson's Disease Questionnaire (PDQ-39)
- Motor Fluctuations: Wearing-off questionnaire
- Activities of Daily Living: UPDRS Part II
- Global Impression: Clinical Global Impression (CGI)
- Wearable sensor movement data
- Tremor characterization
- Gait analysis
Comparison to Other Neuromodulation Approaches
Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS)
[DBS](/therapeutics/deep-brain-stimulation) is the most established neuromodulation therapy for advanced Parkinson's disease, involving surgical implantation of electrodes in specific brain targets[@deuschl2006]:
| Aspect | vCR | DBS |
|--------|-----|-----|
| Invasiveness | Non-invasive (wristband) | Surgical (brain implantation) |
| Target | Peripheral (wrist) | Central (STN or GPi) |
| Reversibility | Fully reversible | Partially reversible |
| Risk profile | Minimal (skin irritation) | Surgical risks, infection, bleeding |
| Hospitalization | None | Requires surgery |
| Cost | Lower | Higher |
| Programming | Simple | Complex |
vCR offers a dramatically safer alternative that could potentially be used earlier in the disease course, before patients would otherwise consider surgical options.
Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS)
tDCS uses weak electrical currents applied through scalp electrodes to modulate cortical excitability[@bruni2018]:
| Aspect | vCR | tDCS |
|--------|-----|------|
| Modality | Vibrotactile | Electrical |
| Specificity | Peripheral nerve targeting | Broad cortical effects |
| Home use | Yes (wearable) | Limited (supervised sessions) |
| Portability | High | Moderate |
| Session duration | Continuous | 20-30 minutes |
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS)
Repetitive TMS uses magnetic fields to induce neural activity in cortical regions[@lefaucheur2014]:
| Aspect | vCR | rTMS |
|--------|-----|------|
| Location | Peripheral (wrist) | Central (scalp) |
| Portability | High (wearable) | Low (desktop system) |
| Frequency | Continuous | Session-based |
| Evidence base | Emerging | Moderate |
Summary Comparison
| Treatment | Invasive | Reversible | Home Use | Evidence Level |
|-----------|----------|------------|----------|----------------|
| vCR | No | Yes | Yes | Phase 1/2 |
| DBS | Yes | Partial | No | Established |
| tDCS | No | Yes | Limited | Moderate |
| rTMS | No | Yes | No | Moderate |
Preliminary Evidence
Theoretical Foundation
The theoretical basis for vCR draws from multiple convergent lines of evidence:
Computational Modeling:
- Neural network models demonstrate CR can desynchronize pathological oscillations
- Predicts optimal stimulation parameters for maximum desynchronization
- Validated across multiple model systems
- Demonstrated desynchronization in parkinsonian monkey models
- Showed lasting motor improvements after CR treatment
- Established biological plausibility
- Pilot studies in tinnitus demonstrated safety
- Initial Parkinson's studies showed tolerability
- Provided proof-of-concept for approach
Expected Therapeutic Outcomes
Based on the evidence base, vCR therapy is expected to provide:
Motor Benefits:
- Reduced bradykinesia (faster movement initiation)
- Decreased rigidity (improved flexibility)
- Potential tremor reduction
- Improved overall motor function
- Mood improvements
- Sleep quality enhancement
- Reduced fatigue
- Lasting effects beyond treatment period (from plasticity)
- Cumulative benefits with continued treatment
- Potential disease-modifying effects
Therapeutic Implications
Clinical Potential
If successful, vCR could transform Parkinson's disease treatment:
Adjunct Therapy:
- Complementary to dopaminergic medications
- Could reduce medication requirements
- Addresses motor fluctuations
- Potential to slow progression through network normalization
- Neuroplasticity-based lasting effects
- May alter disease trajectory
- Reduced motor fluctuations and dyskinesias
- Improved daily functioning
- Enhanced independence
- Home-based treatment without surgical intervention
- Can be implemented earlier in disease course
- Reduces healthcare system burden
Future Directions
The development of vCR opens several research pathways:
Combination Approaches:
- vCR + medication optimization
- vCR + physical therapy
- vCR + cognitive training
- Essential tremor
- Dystonia
- Other movement disorders
- Personalized stimulation algorithms
- Integration with wearable sensors
- Mobile health applications
Cross-References
Related Pages
- [Parkinson's Disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease)
- [Deep Brain Stimulation](/therapeutics/deep-brain-stimulation)
- [Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation](/therapeutics/tdcs)
- [Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation](/therapeutics/rTMS)
- [Alpha-Synuclein Aggregation](/mechanisms/alpha-synuclein)
- [Basal ganglia pathways](/mechanisms/basal-ganglia-pathways)
- [Motor fluctuations](/mechanisms/motor-fluctuations)
External Resources
- [ClinicalTrials.gov Record](https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05881460)
- [Michael J. Fox Foundation](https://www.michaeljfox.org/)
- [Parkinson's Foundation](https://www.parkinson.org/)
References
Pathway Diagram
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