The aim of the study is to transfer the rTMS stimulation protocol by Raij et al. (2018) into a therapeutic setting to improve exposure therapy in acrophobic patients. The quasi-randomized, placebo-controlled and double-blinded study will include 88 patients with height phobia (according to DSM 5). All participants will perform two exposure sessions in virtual reality (VR). Before exposure therapy, one group will receive verum rTMS of the left frontal cortex, which is indirectly functionally linked to the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (Raij et al., 2018). The control group will receive sham stimulation. A structural MRI and a TMS navigation system will be used for precise localization of the left FC. Anxiety symptoms will be measured using subjective ratings (e.g. Acrophobia Questionnaire) and the behavioural approach task (BAT) in VR and in real life before and after the treatment, and at 6 months follow-up. Furthermore, blood samples will be collected before rTMS and after exposure treatment to assess epigenetic and gene expression based changes.
The following hypotheses are derived: 1. Patients with acrophobia, who receive an active rTMS of the left FC before VRET, show a significantly stronger reduction of phobic symptoms immediately after exposure therapy, compared to the sham stimulation group. 2. Patients with acrophobia, who receive an active rTMS of the left FC before VRET, show a significantly greater increase in approach behavior and significantly less distress during the BAT immediately after exposure therapy, compared to the sham stimulation group. 3. The postulated differences in hypotheses 1 and 2 are still detectable at follow-up after 6 months.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
87
Martin J. Herrmann
Würzburg, Germany
Subjective anxiety symptoms
Acrophobia Questionnaire (Cohen, 1977) with two subscales: 1) degree of anxiety (ACRO) and 2) degree of avoidance (AVOI) in height-related situations.
Time frame: change from T1 (baseline /study start) to T4 (immediately after treatment)
Subjective anxiety in behavioral approach tests (BAT)
anxiety measurement by a behavioral approach test (BAT) in virtual reality (glass elevator on the outside of an high-rise building, height up to 150m) and in real life (open stairwell height up to 11,6m).
Time frame: change from T1 (baseline /study start) to T4 (immediately after treatment)
Subjective anxiety symptoms (Follow-Up)
Acrophobia Questionnaire (Cohen, 1977) with two subscales: 1) degree of anxiety (ACRO) and 2) degree of avoidance (AVOI) in height-related situations.
Time frame: change from T1 (baseline/ study start) to T28 (6 months follow-up)
Subjective anxiety in behavioral approach tests (BAT) (Follow-Up)
anxiety measurement by a behavioral approach test (BAT) in virtual reality (glass elevator on the outside of an high-rise building, height up to 150m) and in real life (open stairwell height up to 11,6m).
Time frame: change from T1 (baseline /study start) to T28 (6 months follow-up)
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