Improving Speech in Noise Using Noninvasive Stimulation (NCT07176936) | Clinical Trial Compass
RecruitingNot Applicable
Improving Speech in Noise Using Noninvasive Stimulation
United States55 participantsStarted 2026-03-21
Plain-language summary
Traumatic brain injury, a common injury in military service personnel, often leads to poor processing of speech in noisy environments. The goal of the current study is to better understand the brain basis for this difficulty and evaluate a new approach to improving speech in noise perception.
Who can participate
Age range25 Years – 55 Years
SexALL
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Inclusion Criteria:
* 25-55 years old
* Proficiency in English
* TBI group: history of traumatic brain injury by blast or physical trauma
* Normal hearing group: no history of traumatic brain injury
Exclusion Criteria:
* Other neurological diseases or related conditions will be excluded (e.g., large vessel stroke, seizures). We will exclude patients with severe medical diseases that may be associated with impaired cognition (e.g., heart failure, dialysis dependent kidney disease, brain cancer). Further, psychiatric diseases that are unlikely to be related to trauma will be excluded (e.g., schizophrenia).
Patients with histories of severe psychiatric disease prior to trauma exposure will be excluded.
* Current illicit or prescription drug abuse (within the last two months)
* Any taVNS contraindication, including but not limited to the presence of unremovable metal in the left ear, known heart conditions, medications that influence neurotransmitters thought to be critical for vagus nerve stimulation (norepinephrine, acetylcholine, and serotonin), or implanted medical devices such as a pacemaker.
What they're measuring
1
Safety and feasibility
Timeframe: From enrollment to the end of treatment is between 2 days and 2 weeks.