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Clinical Efficacy and Mechanism of tDCS for Dysphagia in Parkinson's Disease (NCT07153692)
Overview
This study evaluates the efficacy and mechanisms of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) for treating dysphagia (swallowing difficulties) in patients with Parkinson's disease and related disorders["@nct"].
Study Details
| Field | Value |
|-------|-------|
| NCT ID | NCT07153692 |
| Status | Recruiting |
| Phase | To be determined |
| Study Type | Interventional |
| Conditions | Parkinson's Disease, PSP, Atypical Parkinsonism |
| Intervention | Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) |
Scientific Rationale
...
Overview
This study evaluates the efficacy and mechanisms of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) for treating dysphagia (swallowing difficulties) in patients with Parkinson's disease and related disorders["@nct"].
Study Details
| Field | Value |
|-------|-------|
| NCT ID | NCT07153692 |
| Status | Recruiting |
| Phase | To be determined |
| Study Type | Interventional |
| Conditions | Parkinson's Disease, PSP, Atypical Parkinsonism |
| Intervention | Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) |
Scientific Rationale
Dysphagia in Parkinsonian Syndromes
Swallowing difficulties are common and serious:
- PD: Up to 50-80% develop dysphagia
- PSP: Present in majority, especially later stages
- MSA: Early and severe involvement
Consequences
- Aspiration pneumonia (leading cause of death)
- Malnutrition and dehydration
- Reduced quality of life
- Social isolation
tDCS Mechanism
Transcranial direct current stimulation:
- Non-invasive brain stimulation
- Modulates cortical excitability
- Can enhance neuroplasticity
- Targets swallowing cortex
Target Regions
- Pharyngeal motor cortex
- Premotor cortex
- Brainstem swallowing centers
- Cortical-subcortical networks
Study Objectives
Primary Endpoints
- Swallowing function (videofluoroscopic assessment)
- Penetration-Aspiration Scale scores
- Quality of life measures
Secondary Endpoints
- Cortical activation patterns (fMRI)
- Swallowing kinematics
- Safety and tolerability
- Long-term effects
Intervention Protocol
- Stimulation parameters: 2 mA, 20 min/day
- Session frequency: To be determined
- Duration: Multi-week protocol
- Target: Pharyngeal motor cortex
Relevance to PSP
Dysphagia in PSP is particularly important because:
- Contributes to mortality (aspiration pneumonia)
- Develops early in disease course
- Limited treatment options
- Affects cortical and brainstem structures
The study may benefit PSP patients through:
- Improved understanding of tDCS mechanisms
- Potential therapeutic application
- Biomarker development
Expected Outcomes
Cross-References
- tDCS in PSP
- Dysphagia in PSP
- Aspiration Pneumonia Prevention
- Non-Invasive Brain Stimulation
References
Additional Background
Neuroanatomy of Swallowing
Swallowing is a complex sensorimotor process requiring coordinated activity across multiple brain regions:
- Cerebral Cortex: Primary motor cortex (M1), premotor cortex, supplementary motor area
- Brainstem: Medulla oblongata (swallowing center), nucleus tractus solitarius
- Cranial Nerves: V, VII, IX, X, XII innervate oropharyngeal structures
- Subcortical Structures: Basal ganglia, cerebellum for motor sequencing
The pharyngeal motor cortex, located in the ventral precentral gyrus, plays a critical role in voluntary swallowing control. Damage to these regions in Parkinson's disease contributes to dysphagia pathophysiology.
tDCS Mechanisms of Action
Transcranial direct current stimulation modulates neuronal excitability through weak electrical currents (typically 1-2 mA):
- Anodal stimulation: Increases cortical excitability, enhances neuroplasticity
- Cathodal stimulation: Decreases cortical excitability
- Effects on neurotransmission: Modulates glutamate, GABA, and dopamine systems
- Neurotrophic effects: May influence BDNF expression and synaptic plasticity
- Anti-inflammatory effects: Potential modulation of neuroinflammation
Clinical Evidence for tDCS in Parkinson's Disease
Multiple studies have investigated tDCS in PD:
- Motor symptoms: Mixed results; some studies show modest improvement in UPDRS scores
- Cognitive function: Some benefit in executive function and working memory
- Gait: Limited evidence for gait improvement
- Dysphagia: Emerging evidence for swallowing function improvement
tDCS in PSP
Progressive supranuclear palsy presents unique challenges:
- Early and severe dysphagia
- Cortical and subcortical involvement
- Limited pharmacological treatment options
Non-invasive brain stimulation may offer:
- Modulation of dysfunctional cortical-subcortical networks
- Potential neuroprotective effects
- Adjunct to pharmacological therapy
Technical Considerations
Stimulation Parameters
- Current intensity: 1-2 mA typically used
- Session duration: 10-30 minutes
- Number of sessions: Typically 5-20 sessions
- Electrode placement: Various montages (bipolar, unilateral, bilateral)
Safety Profile
tDCS is generally well-tolerated with mild side effects:
- Transient skin irritation
- Mild headache
- Rare: seizure risk minimal with standard protocols
Future Directions
Biomarker Development
- fMRI to assess cortical activation changes
- MEG/EEG for network connectivity analysis
- Behavioral measures for functional improvement
Combined Approaches
- tDCS + rehabilitation therapy
- tDCS + pharmacological intervention
- tDCS + other neuromodulation (rTMS)
Comparison with Other Neuromodulation Approaches
| Modality | Mechanism | Invasiveness | Evidence Level |
|----------|-----------|--------------|----------------|
| tDCS | Weak DC current | Non-invasive | Growing |
| rTMS | Magnetic induction | Non-invasive | Moderate |
| DBS | Electrical implant | Invasive | Strong |
| VNS | Vagal stimulation | Invasive/Implant | Growing |
Regulatory Status
- tDCS is FDA-cleared for depression (not specifically for neurological conditions)
- Off-label use for neurological conditions is common
- Clinical trials needed for specific indications like PD dysphagia
References for Expanded Content
Detailed Swallowing Physiology
The Four Phases of Swallowing
- Food is chewed and mixed with saliva
- Formation of bolus
- Tongue manipulates bolus
- Voluntary control
- Tongue propels bolus posteriorly
- Triggered by sensory input
- Duration: ~1 second
- Voluntary to involuntary transition
- Reflexive response
- Elevation of larynx
- Closure of airway
- Opening of upper esophageal sphincter
- Duration: ~1 second
- Peristaltic wave
- Lower esophageal sphincter opens
- Bolus enters stomach
- Duration: 8-20 seconds
Neural Control in Parkinson's Disease
PD affects swallowing at multiple levels:
Cortical Changes:
- Reduced activation in motor and premotor cortex
- Impaired cortical control of swallowing
- Loss of compensatory activation patterns
- Basal ganglia dysfunction affects motor sequencing
- Dopaminergic degeneration impacts swallow timing
- Reduced automaticity of swallowing
- Degeneration of nucleus tractus solitarius
- Dysfunction of swallowing center
- Impaired reflex coordination
Clinical Assessment Tools
Videofluoroscopic Swallowing Study (VFSS)
- Gold standard for dysphagia assessment
- Real-time X-ray imaging
- Visualizes all phases of swallowing
- Penetration-Aspiration Scale (PAS) scoring
Fiberoptic Endoscopic Evaluation of FEES
- Direct visualization of pharynx
- No radiation exposure
- Assessment of secretion management
- Sensory testing capability
Clinical Bedside Assessment
- Water swallow test
- Volume-viscosity assessment
- Standardized clinical scales
- Swallowing frequency monitoring
Pathophysiology of Dysphagia in Parkinsonian Syndromes
Parkinson's Disease
- Levodopa-responsive but dysphagia often persists
- May worsen with disease progression
- Often silent until advanced stages
- Involvement of dopaminergic and non-dopaminergic pathways
Progressive Supranuclear Palsy
- Early and prominent dysphagia
- Vertical gaze palsy association
- Pseudobulbar features
- Rapid progression
Multiple System Atrophy
- Autonomic dysfunction prominent
- Early swallowing involvement
- Respiratory dysfunction overlap
- Poor prognosis
Therapeutic Approaches
Pharmacological
- Levodopa: Variable effects on dysphagia
- Dopamine agonists: Limited benefit
- Botulinum toxin: For cricopharyngeal dysfunction
Rehabilitation
- Swallowing therapy (Lee Silverman Voice Treatment)
- Expiratory muscle strength training
- Mendelssohn maneuver
- Chin-tuck positioning
Neuromodulation
- tDCS: Non-invasive, targets cortical networks
- rTMS: May improve swallow function
- Pharyngeal electrical stimulation
Study Design Considerations
Outcome Measures
- Primary: VFSS parameters, PAS scores
- Secondary: Quality of life (SWAL-QOL), functional oral intake
- Exploratory: Cortical activation (fMRI), biomarkers
Inclusion Criteria
- Diagnosis of PD, PSP, or related disorder
- Clinically significant dysphagia
- Stable medication regimen
- Able to undergo neuroimaging
Exclusion Criteria
- Contraindications to tDCS
- Significant cognitive impairment
- Metallic implants
- Active neurological conditions
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