Traumatic brain injury (TBI) and chronic pain are common and serious health problems for military veterans and often co-occur, leading to poor post-deployment adjustment. Pharmacological treatments for pain elevate risk of opioid abuse, and research suggests veterans perceive barriers to existing non-pharmacological, clinic-based treatments. Thus, there is an urgent need to develop pain management approaches that are effective, overcome barriers to care, and are readily usable by Veterans. Evidence suggests that neuromodulatory treatments, grounded in understanding of neurophysiological mechanisms of pain, reduce pain-related symptoms and have the potential to be developed into self-directed treatments through use of mobile technology.
This study is a prospective, three-arm, randomized controlled trial of neuromodulatory treatments for chronic pain, for post-9/11 veterans with co-occuring pain and TBI. Three hundred participants will be scheduled for a baseline interview at the Duke Behavioral Health and Technology Lab after passing a preliminary telephone screen. After providing informed consent, participants will provide data on clinical measures. Electroencephalography (EEG) will be used to measure brain activity. Following data collection, participants will be assigned to one of three groups (n=100 in each). Each group will receive an iPod Touch with a different mobile application (app), which participants will be instructed to use for 10 minute a day, 4 times a week for 12 weeks. Study coordinators will conduct two home visits (week 1 and week 6) and two phone calls (week 3 and week 9) to reinforce training, troubleshoot difficulties, and ask about intervention utilization. Follow-up data on clinical measures and EEG will be collected at 12 weeks and again at 24 weeks.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
254
Neuromodulatory intervention for pain management
Neuromodulatory intervention for pain management
Neuromodulatory intervention for pain management
Duke University Medical Center, Department of Psychiatry
Durham, North Carolina, United States
Change in Self-reported Pain Intensity
Measured by the Defense and Veterans Pain Rating Scale (DVPRS), a graphic tool to facilitate self-reported pain rating using a scale from 0-10, 0 being "no pain" to 10 being "as bad as it could be, nothing else matters."
Time frame: Baseline and 12 weeks
Change in EEG Alpha Power
Average FFT (Fast Fourier Transform) Power (alpha 8-12 Hz) measured as sqrt(uV)/Hz.
Time frame: 0 and 12 weeks
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