Analysis and Suppression of Tremor During Grasp Using Ultrasound Imaging and Electrical Stimulation

Status: Recruiting
Location: See location...
Intervention Type: Device
Study Type: Interventional
Study Phase: Not Applicable
SUMMARY

Individuals experiencing tremors face difficulty performing activities of daily living caused by involuntary oscillation of the muscles in the hands and arms. Current solutions to help suppress tremors include medication, surgery, assistive devices and lifestyle change. However, each of these has a drawback of its own including cost and unwanted side effects. Aside from the solutions listed, it has been shown that functional electrical stimulation(FES) is a possible solution to help suppress tremor. Additionally, FES can be combined with different technologies including accelerometers, gyroscopes and motion capture to develop a closed loop system for tremor suppression. However, this has drawbacks including signal interference and the need for multiple sensor to fully classify the tremor. Ultrasound imaging solves some of these issues because it can provide a direct visualization of hand muscles that contribute to tremor. This study will focus on detecting characterizing and differentiating tremors from voluntary hand motion using ultrasound imaging. The results obtained from this study will help design FES-based tremor-suppression techniques in the future. This study will target both subjects with different tremor disorders and able bodied subjects.

Eligibility
Participation Requirements
Sex: All
Minimum Age: 18
Maximum Age: 90
Healthy Volunteers: t
View:

• At least 40 years of age, and no more than 90 years of age.

• Meet UK Parkinson's disease brain bank diagnostic criteria

• Have clinical evidence of rest tremor of one or both upper extremities defined as involuntary, rhythmic oscillations about any joint within the upper extremities

• Tremor amplitude must be at minimum 1 cm as determined by expert opinion by a movement disorders specialist.

• Due to the nature of measurements occurring during a grasp maneuver, the tremor must be deemed to become re-emergent with a fixed posture. This shall be defined by development of postural tremor that does not begin immediately upon grasping the vertical object, but instead with a delay in development of oscillatory movement of at least half a second as timed by a stopwatch, and that may grow in amplitude over seconds to maximum amplitude without changing the force of the grasp at first. Note that within-individual intermittency and variability of tremor can be influenced by anxiety, stress, cold temperature, and fatigue. In an effort to reduce this variability, we will have subjects perform tasks in a comfortable area, providing up to 20 minutes to allow them to relax in a temperature-neutral location, and reduce anxiety

⁃ Subjects will fall under the able body category if they exhibit no movement disorders and can perform grasping motion with no inhibition.

Locations
United States
North Carolina
Engineering Building III
RECRUITING
Raleigh
Contact Information
Primary
Nitin Sharma
nsharm23@ncsu.edu
919-513-0787
Time Frame
Start Date: 2020-02-11
Estimated Completion Date: 2100-01-01
Participants
Target number of participants: 16
Treatments
Experimental: Tremor Group
Individuals with either parkinson's disease or essential tremor will be recruited in this group
Experimental: Able Body Group
Individuals with no disorders will be recruited in this group
Sponsors
Leads: North Carolina State University
Collaborators: University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

This content was sourced from clinicaltrials.gov