Abstract
BackgroundMal de Débarquement Syndrome (MdDS) is a medically refractory neurotological disorder characterized by persistent oscillating vertigo that follows a period of entrainment to oscillating motion such as experienced during sea or air travel. Fronto-occipital hypersynchrony may correlate with MdDS symptom severity.Materials and methodsIndividuals with treatment refractory MdDS lasting at least 6 months received single administrations of three fronto-occipital transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) protocols in an “n-of-1” double-blind randomized design: alpha frequency anti-phase, alpha-frequency in-phase, and gamma frequency control. Baseline assessments were made on Day 1. The treatment protocol that led to the most acute reduction in symptoms during a test session on Day 2 was administered for 10–12 stacked sessions given on Days 3 through 5 (20-minutes at 2-4mA). Pre to post symptom changes were assessed on Day 1 and Day 5. Participants who could clearly choose a preferred protocol on Day 2 did better on Day 5 than those who could not make a short-term determination on Day 2 and either chose a protocol based on minimized side effects or were randomized to one of the three protocols. In addition, weekly symptom assessments were made for four baseline and seven post stimulation points for the Dizziness Handicap Inventory (DHI), MdDS Balance Rating Scale (MBRS), and Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS).ResultsOf 24 participants, 13 chose anti-phase, 7 chose in-phase, and 4 chose control stimulation. Compared to baseline, 10/24 completers noted ≥ 25% reduction, 5/24 ≥50% reduction, and 2/24 ≥75% reduction in oscillating vertigo intensity from Day 1 to Day 5. Stimulating at a frequency slightly higher than the individual alpha frequency (IAF) was better than stimulating at exactly the IAF, and slightly better than stimulating with a strategy of standardized stimulation at 10Hz. A one-way repeated measures ANOVA of weekly DHI, MBRS, and HADS measurements showed significant reductions immediately after treatment with improvement increasing through post-treatment week 6.ConclusionFronto-occipital tACS may be effective in reducing the oscillating vertigo of MdDS and serve as a portable neuromodulation alternative for longer-term treatment. Stimulation frequency relative to the IAF may be important in determining the optimum treatment protocol [ClinicalTrials.gov study NCT02540616. https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02540616].
Highlights
Mal de debarquement Syndrome (MdDS) is a neurotological disorder resulting from entrainment to oscillating motion, such as occurs during sea or air travel [1,2]
Weekly symptom assessments were made for four baseline and seven post stimulation points for the Dizziness Handicap Inventory (DHI), MdDS Balance Rating Scale (MBRS), and Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS)
We explored whether the connectivity modulations induced indirectly through repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) might be directly achievable by entraining fronto-occipital networks with transcranial alternating current stimulation and lead to persistent treatment response after a period of stimulation. tACS is a form of non-invasive brain stimulation in which low levels of current are applied to the scalp at a frequency that is tuned to entrain underlying latent rhythms [18,19,20]
Summary
Mal de debarquement Syndrome (MdDS) is a neurotological disorder resulting from entrainment to oscillating motion, such as occurs during sea or air travel [1,2]. MdDS symptoms include persistent oscillating vertigo, fatigue, cognitive slowing, visual motion intolerance, and headaches [3,4,5]. Biological markers for the MdDS brain-state include differences in both long-range cortico-cortical connectivity and neocortical-limbic connectivity [9,10,11]. Frontooccipital connectivity in the alpha frequency correlates with symptom modulation after noninvasive brain stimulation with repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) [9,10,12]. Decreasing posterior default mode connectivity with the entorhinal cortex correlates with reduction in vertigo intensity [13]
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