From the Journals

Mechanical touch therapy device promising for anxiety


 

An at-home investigational device is a promising noninvasive therapeutic approach for anxiety disorders, results from an open-label pilot trial suggest.

The small study showed users of the Mechanical Affective Touch Therapy (MATT) had improved anxiety and depression symptoms, which corresponded to positive changes in alpha and theta oscillatory activity.

Butler Hospital

Dr. Linda L. Carpenter

“MATT is part of a large movement toward developing therapeutic devices that patients can self-administer at home,” study author Linda L. Carpenter, MD, professor of psychiatry at Brown University and director of the Neuromodulation & Neuroimaging Core at Butler Hospital, both in Providence, R.I., told this news organization, adding that the new study is a step in the right direction of improving the technology used to treat anxiety disorders.

The study was published online in Frontiers in Psychiatry.

Robust safety profile

Therapeutic noninvasive peripheral nerve stimulation is under investigation for anxiety as well as pain and depression. Nerve activation is achieved by delivering electrical or mechanical energy, although most devices to date have used electrical stimulation.

Although electrical stimulation is considered low risk, mechanical stimulation that activates somatosensory pathways has an even more robust safety profile, the investigators note.

The MATT device targets C-tactile fibers (CT) specialized unmyelinated Group C peripheral nerve fibers that fire when stroked at velocities perceived as pleasurable or comforting.

To use the device, participants wear a headset with a small vibrating piece that sits on the mastoid bone behind each ear. These pieces deliver gentle vibrations that can be adjusted by patients.

During development of the MATT stimulation, researchers noted that an isochronic 10 Hz wave, cycling 2 seconds on and 2 seconds off, induced a state of relaxation and increased occipital alpha oscillations in pilot study participants.

The current study was designed to confirm preliminary efficacy and feasibility signals. The sample included 22 patients (mean age 37.3 years, 72.7% female, 77.3% White). All study participants were diagnosed with an anxiety disorder and had at least moderately severe anxiety symptoms. Some also had symptoms of panic or depression.

Many participants were on medications that weren’t effective, and they wanted to find a nondrug method of relieving their symptoms, said Dr. Carpenter.

What’s the mechanism?

Participants learned how to administer the stimulation and adjust the intensity of vibrations to a level where it was consistently detectable but not uncomfortable. Then they received a MATT device to use at home at least twice daily for 20 minutes.

Patients kept daily diaries documenting device use, adverse effects, and technological problems. In-person assessments were held at 2 and 4 weeks.

Researchers collected resting EEG immediately before, and after, the second stimulation session and again following 4 weeks of MATT use.

At baseline and after 2 and 4 weeks, patients self-reported anxiety using the 7-item Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7) scale, depression with the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), and stress using the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS). They also reported symptoms with the Depression, Anxiety, Stress Scale (DASS).

Researchers also investigated “interoceptive awareness” or being mindful of your body and internal feelings. For this, they had participants complete the 32-item Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness pre- and post treatment.

Interoceptive awareness “is a whole new area of interest in neuroscience and brain health,” said Dr. Carpenter. “The hypothesis was that one way this device might work is that vibrations would travel to the insular cortex, the part of the brain that involves mindfulness and self-awareness.”

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