Thursday, November 10, 2022

Mega Effort To Study Vagus Nerve Stimulation

University of Minnesota Twin Cities researchers are leading a comprehensive global clinical study that seeks to reveal the functional effects of vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) across the human body.
The Research Evaluating Vagal Excitation and Anatomical Links (REVEAL) project is a $21 million National Institutes of Health-funded project that will take place over three years. REVEAL aims to study the anatomical connections and functional effects of vagus nerve stimulation, or VNS, which is an ​​FDA-approved treatment for epilepsy and depression.
REVEAL incorporates a large-scale clinical study with up to 144 VNS patients along with three ancillary studies. Together, these studies will assess autonomic, cardiovascular, metabolic, immune, and gastrointestinal function in response to a broad range of VNS parameters. Researchers hope to generate one of the largest publicly available datasets on VNS function in humans.
“The vagus nerve conveys information from the brain to most organs in the body and vice versa,” said John Osborn, PhD, a professor of surgery at the University of Minnesota Medical School and director of the Minnesota Consortium for Autonomic Neuromodulation. “Dysregulation of the vagus nerve underlies many pathological conditions, and we are just now discovering ways to modulate it to treat them.”
“VNS has a proven record treating refractory epilepsy and depression,” said Ziad Nahas, MD, a professor at the University of Minnesota Medical School and a psychiatrist at M Physicians. “The exciting aspect of REVEAL is that it will set the stage for novel therapeutic applications of VNS to autonomic, immune, cardiovascular, and metabolic diseases.”
During the REVEAL studies, participants with implanted VNS devices will receive a wide range of tests to measure physiological, molecular, imaging, genetic, and neural responses to VNS, along with many other experimental and computational outcomes.
“A project involving so many types of measures and physiological systems requires a huge interdisciplinary team. We are fortunate to bring unique experts together involving more than 40 researchers from around the world, including 30 from the University of Minnesota,” said Hubert Lim, PhD, a biomedical engineering professor in the University of Minnesota College of Science and Engineering with a joint appointment in the Medical School.
A part of NIH’s Stimulating Peripheral Activity to Relieve Conditions (SPARC) initiative, REVEAL is funded — award number 1U54AT012307 — by NIH Common Fund and administered by the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health. People interested in participating can send a query to REVEAL@umn.edu.

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