Transcranial Light Therapy involves non-invasive and invisible beams of light that increase energy metabolism in the brain. Transcranial light therapy has been found to promote brain metabolism. The purpose of the study is: To asses the change in cerebral blood flow induced by the Transcranial Continuous and Pulse Near-Infrared Light Therapy in healthy subjects. To correlate with cognitive performance the change in cerebral blood flow induced by the Transcranial Continuous and Pulse Near-Infrared Light Therapy in healthy subjects. To correlate with skin pigmentation the change in cerebral blood flow induced by the Transcranial Continuous and Pulse Near-Infrared Light Therapy in healthy subjects. To assess the safety and tolerability of the Transcranial Continuous and Pulse Near-Infrared Light Therapy in healthy subjects
During study visits a clinician applies transcranial light therapy to both sides of a participant's forehead for about 30 minutes. The study involves, 1 screening visit which may last up to 3 hours, 3 transcranial light therapy treatment visits, and 1 posttreatment visit (5 total visits to the Massachusetts General Hospital). All eligible participants will have 1 visit with continuous light, 1 visit with pulsed light, and 1 visit with sham light. Cerebral blood flow will be measured before and after each light session using DCS-spectroscopy. During sham transcranial light therapy visits, the transcranial light therapy device will not produce near infrared waves (e.g., light energy that cannot penetrate the skin and cranium). The participant will not know which treatment is received at each visit.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
10
Device: LiteCure® The PhotoBioModulation-1000 (TPBM-1000)
Massachusetts General Hospital- Center for Anxiety and Traumatic Stress Disorders
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Change in Cerebral Blood Flow (Baseline to Week 5)
Measured using Diffuse Correlation Spectroscopy (DCS) signal.
Time frame: 5 weeks
Change in Accuracy on N-Back Task (Baseline to Week 5)
The N-Back task is a measure of working memory. Participants are presented a sequence of stimuli and they must decide if the current stimulus is the same as the one presented 2 trials ago. Accuracy was measured as a percentage of correct to incorrect trials.
Time frame: 5 weeks
Number of Participants With Treatment-Emergent Adverse Events
The safety endpoints will evaluate any reported adverse events within one week from each sessions of TLT.
Time frame: 5 weeks
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