Clinical and Physiological Studies of Tremor Syndromes

NCT ID: NCT03027310

Last Updated: 2025-11-12

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Total Enrollment

85 participants

Study Classification

OBSERVATIONAL

Study Start Date

2017-05-05

Study Completion Date

2022-03-23

Brief Summary

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Background:

Researchers have some data on how the brain controls movement and why some people have tremor. But the causes of tremor are not fully known. Researchers want to study people with tremor to learn about changes in the brain and possible causes of tremor.

Objective:

To better understand how the brain controls movement, learn more about tremor, and train movement disorder specialists.

Eligibility:

People ages 18 and older with a diagnosed tremor syndrome

Healthy volunteers ages 18 and older

Design:

Participants will be screened with:

* Medical history
* Physical exam
* Urine tests
* Clinical rating scales
* Health questions
* They may have electromyography (EMG) or accelerometry. Sensors or electrodes taped to the skin measure movement.

Participation lasts up to 1 year.

Some participants will have a visit to examine their tremor more. They may have rating scales, EMG, and drawing and writing tests.

Participants will be in 1 or more substudies. These will require up to 7 visits. Visits could include the following:

* EMG with accelerometry
* Small electrodes taped on the body give small electric shocks that stimulate nerves.
* MRI: Participants lie on a table that slides into a cylinder that takes pictures of the body while they do simple tasks.
* Small electrodes on the scalp record brain waves.
* A cone with detectors on the head measures brain activity while participants do tasks.
* A wire coil held on the scalp gives an electrical current that affects brain activity.
* Tests for thinking, memory, smell, hearing, or vision
* Electrodes on the head give a weak electrical current that affects brain activity.
* Photographs or videos of movement

Participant data may be shared with other researchers.

Detailed Description

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Objectives

The purpose of this protocol is to study the phenotypic spectrum and the pathophysiology of tremor syndromes by performing small behavioral, electrophysiological and neuroimaging sub-studies. The protocol includes techniques with minimal risk (standard clinical evaluation, MRI, EEG, peripheral nerve stimulation, single and paired pulse TMS) and certain sub-studies may involve healthy volunteers. This protocol aims to study neurophysiological and behavioral outcomes in defined groups of patients with tremor syndromes, to inform future hypothesis-driven and confirmatory studies, which will be developed and submitted as separate protocols. For this purpose, we aim to conduct 1) pilot sub-studies, 2) individual patient investigations, 3) technical development studies.

Study population

We intend to enroll up to 300 patients with essential tremor and other isolated action tremor syndromes, as well as 150 healthy volunteers.

Design

This is a non-hypothesis driven study involving standardized phenotyping After patients and healthy volunteers complete a screening visit, patients will undergo a standardized phenotyping visit including clinical rating scales as well as electrophysiological tremorworkup. Patient and healthy controls may then be enrolled in sub-studies, and if a substudy leads to results of interest, a separate protocol will be submitted with a priori hypotheses, specific study design and power analysis adapted from the pilot or exploratory sub-studies performed in the present protocol.

Outcome measures

Outcome measures applied in this protocol involve methods for tremor phenotyping such as clinical rating scales and questionnaires, electrophysiological tremor studies, videotaped exam, as well as digitizing based tasks. During the sub-studies focused on the neurophysiological characterization of tremor syndromes, the following outcome measures will be applied: EMG: we will analyze tremor signals using spectral analyses, coherence analyses, and in combination with accelerometry, EEG, MEG, and TMS to explore tremor-networks. MRI: we will analyze measures such as the amplitude of the BOLD signal (fMRI); tractography between seed and target regions of interest (using DTI); morphometry of brain regions (using VBM); and different neurotransmitter levels in brain regions of interest (using MRS). EEG and MEG: we will quantify measures such as corticomuscular coherence, event- or task-related potentials, synchronization/desynchronization, and coherence between sensors or sources located close to the brain areas of interest. TMS: we will analyze measures such as MEP amplitude and central conduction time, as well as measures of cortical excitability and inhibition paradigms. Behavioral measures: we will quantify measures of voluntary movement involving tremor, reaction times to initiate movements, EMG patterns, movement kinematics (position, velocity, acceleration, curvature), eye movement. Actigraphy: We will quantify continuous recordings of motion sensors involving multiaxial accelerometers and gyroscopes. Furthermore, we may measure autonomic data during the course of experiments (such as blood pressure, skin co ductance, and respiratory rate) which would correlate to the outcome measures.

Conditions

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Parkinson Disease Dystonia Essential Tremor

Keywords

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Dystonic Tremor Essential Tremor Parkinsonism Voice Tremor Parkinson's Disease Natural History

Study Design

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Observational Model Type

CASE_CONTROL

Study Time Perspective

PROSPECTIVE

Study Groups

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Healthy Volunteers

adult healthy volunteers

No interventions assigned to this group

tremor patients

adult patients with tremor

No interventions assigned to this group

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Patients diagnosed with a tremor syndrome, including, but not limited to

* Essential tremor (per definition of the Tremor Research Group)
* Parkinson disease (per UK Brain Bank criteria)
* Focal tremor such as isolated head tremor, voice tremor
* Task-specific tremor such as primary writing tremor
* Orthostatic tremor
* Patients with other tremor syndromes such as dystonic tremor, intention tremor, etc.
* Age 18 or older
* Able to give informed consent
* Agree to not drink caffeine or alcohol for 12 hours before phenotyping and selected sub-study visits because both agents can modify brain activity and may confound outcome measures.


* Age 18 or older.
* Able to give informed consent.
* Agree to not consume caffeine or alcohol for 12 hours before selected sub-study visits because both agents may modify the activity of the brain during the study.

Exclusion Criteria

* Problematic alcohol use, as defined by a score of 8 or higher on the WHO Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT).
* History of a brain tumor, a stroke, traumatic brain injury, epilepsy or a history of seizures.
* History of psychotic disorder, Bipolar Disorder or a current depressive episode.
* History or clinical evidence of another neurologic disorder than a tremor syndrome as defined above, which may interfere with the ability to comply with protocol requirements or interpret the obtained results.


* Have abnormal findings of clinical significance on the neurological examination that may affect the scientific integrity of the study
* Problematic alcohol use, as defined by a score of 8 or higher on the WHO Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT)
* History of a brain tumor, a stroke, traumatic brain injury, epilepsy or a history of seizures.
* History of psychotic disorder, Bipolar Disorder or a current depressive episode.


We will follow the NMR Center guidelines for MR safety.

Some of the exclusions are:

* Have non-MRI compatible metal in the body, such as a cardiac pacemaker, brain stimulator, shrapnel, surgical metal, clips in the brain or on blood vessels, cochlear implants, artificial heart valves or ferromagnetic fragments in the eye or oral cavity as these make having an MRI unsafe.
* Unable to lie flat on the back for the expected length of the experiment.
* Have uncontrolled movements of the head.
* Have an abnormality on the brain imaging or neurologic examination not related to the diagnosis.
* Uncomfortable being in a small space for the expected length of the experiment.
* Non-removable body piercing or tattoo posing MRI risk
* Pregnancy.


* Ferromagnetic metal in the cranial cavity or eye, e.g. aneurysm clip or ocular foreign body.
* Implanted electronic device including deep brain stimulation systems.
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)

NIH

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Debra J Ehrlich, M.D.

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)

Locations

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National Institutes of Health Clinical Center

Bethesda, Maryland, United States

Site Status

Countries

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United States

Related Links

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Other Identifiers

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17-N-0035

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: secondary_id

170035

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id