Effectiveness of Myobloc in Treating Dystonia in Musicians
Information source: Columbia University
Information obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov on December 31, 2007 Link to the current ClinicalTrials.gov record.
Condition(s) targeted: Focal Dystonia
Intervention: Botulinum toxin type B (Drug)
Phase: Phase 4
Status: Recruiting
Sponsored by: Columbia University Official(s) and/or principal investigator(s): Seth Pullman, MD, Principal Investigator, Affiliation: Columbia University Medical Center, Department of Neurology
Overall contact: Alicia Floyd, BA, Phone: 212-305-1331, Email: agf2103@columbia.edu
Summary
This study uses a computerized method to quantify musical performance with music notation
analysis before and after treatment with botulinum toxin type B (Myobloc, Elan
Pharmaceuticals). Myobloc is a purified and diluted form of botulinum toxin used medically
to relax unwanted muscle spasms and movements. The aim of the study is to quantify any
improvements or changes in performance following treatment.
Clinical Details
Official title: A Computerized Quantitative Open Label Evaluation of the Efficacy of Myobloc in the Treatment of Focal Dystonia in Musicians
Study design: Treatment, Non-Randomized, Open Label, Uncontrolled, Single Group Assignment, Efficacy Study
Primary outcome: PitchNote speed Fatigability Timing Tonal deterioration Loudness/force
Secondary outcome: Subjective assessment of improvement by patient on scale of 0-100%
Detailed description:
Dystonia represents a group of clinical disorders characterized by various combinations of
sustained involuntary muscle contractions, abnormal postures and movements, tremors and pain.
Dystonia can occur at rest but is more likely to appear during voluntary activity.
Focal dystonia affects one body area and includes blepharospasm, oromandibular dystonia,
spasmodic dysphonia, torticollis, and limb dystonia. Focal dystonia typically presents as
task-specific muscle spasms or “occupational cramps” in which learned or repetitive motor
tasks (such as writing or playing a musical instrument) trigger muscle spasms and interfere
with performance while other actions remain normal. Writer’s cramp is the most common form
of idiopathic limb dystonia [1-3] where involuntary muscle activity and abnormal postures
affect the arms and hands, but virtually any part of the body may be affected, even the lips
when playing a woodwind or brass instrument [4]. Patients may develop two focal dystonias
but rarely does focal dystonia progress to more generalized forms.
As originally defined by Oppenheim [5], dystonia refers to the slow, sustained, writhing,
contorting movements of dystonia musculorum deformans. Dystonic movements, however, are
often rapid [6] and this can be a cause for misdiagnosis. Electromyography (EMG) may be
helpful in corroborating dystonia, but is not essential for diagnostic purposes. Nerve
conduction studies, short and long loop reflexes and analysis of motor units are normal [7,
8]. Ballistic movements, which are normally tri-phasic in pattern with alternating
agonist-antagonist bursts, may show disrupted patterns with co-contraction of agonist and
antagonist muscles and excessively long EMG bursts in dystonia [3].
Dystonic spasms are intriguing in that they may be suppressed (or triggered) by sensory input
such as postural change, tactile stimuli, alternative movements or even thought processes
[9]. Studies are revealing that the involuntary muscle spasms may be due, at least in part,
to abnormal sensory processing of spindle afferent information [10-12]. This may help
explain the nature of these sensory “tricks” as well as why the effect of treatment using
botulinum toxin usually outlasts the weakness it creates.
Though the pathophysiology of musicians’ dystonia has yet to be determined fully, the motor
learning associated with playing a musical instrument probably results in both functional and
structural changes in the brain [13]. This plastic reorganization, including the rapid
unmasking of existing neural circuitry and the establishment of new connections, is probably
fundamental to the accomplishment of skillful playing, but also may result in focal,
task-specific dystonia. When musicians get dystonia, their playing abilities can become
severely compromised, to the point where they may not be able to perform professionally, and
possibly not even teach. While botulinum toxin injections can be highly successful in
allowing musicians to perform again, there are no objective methods to evaluate
improvement.
Subtle dystonic abnormalities in motor control, therefore, particularly when they involve the
arms, are difficult to ascertain with a high level of certainty. There are no truly
objective measures of arm dystonia, and this is problematic because arm involvement can
present so mildly as to go unnoticed by the examiner [14]. Furthermore, patients may not
complain of mild finger or thumb cramping, arm twisting or shoulder elevation that could
signify the presence of dystonia.
Clinical rating scales, even those that have been validated, do not detect subtle motor
dysfunction or small changes after treatment [15] and certainly cannot determine improvement
in musical performance. Metabolic imaging studies using positron emission tomography (PET)
studies are emerging as helpful ancillary tests, but these are invasive and expensive.
Furthermore, while PET studies have implicated that primary dystonia may be associated with
relative hypermetabolism in the putamen [16], there have been conflicting reports [17].
With this proposal, a novel method devised for quantifying change in musical performance that
will be able directly to rate or score changes in musical output. It will be a quantitative,
objective computerized evaluation that compares the patients’ fine motor skills before and
after treatment with Myobloc ®. It will the first quantitative analysis of musical ability
of its kind and could significantly impact the way musicians determine the efficacy of
botulinum toxin treatment.
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Eligibility
Minimum age: 25 Years.
Maximum age: 69 Years.
Gender(s): Both.
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
Focal, task-specific dystonia clinically determined to be the result of a high level of
musical skill and intensive performance history
Exclusion Criteria:
Neurological disorders other than dystonia
Patients who are clinically depressed, demented or otherwise unable to perform
appropriately or sit through 1 hour of testing
Patients who have undergone pallidotomy, thalamotomy or deep brain stimulator
implantations
Patients who have who recently have taken medications with extrapyramidal or tremorogenic
side effects
Locations and Contacts
Alicia Floyd, BA, Phone: 212-305-1331, Email: agf2103@columbia.edu
Neurological Institute, 710 W. 168th Street, NI-1112, New York, New York 10032, United States; Recruiting Seth Pullman, MD, Phone: 212-305-1331, Email: sp31@columbia.edu Seth Pullman, MD, Principal Investigator
Additional Information
Starting date: April 2003
Ending date: January 2007
Last updated: February 28, 2007
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