Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) is associated with changes of the corticospinal tract integrity, which is quantified by means of corticospinal plasticity. Several factors, such as exercise and interlimb coordination can influence such corticospinal plasticity. Previous work in healthy and in stroke participants showed that the greatest improvement of corticospinal plasticity occurred during in-phase bilateral arm exercises. Here, the investigators propose a concurrent multiple baseline design study which has the advantage to verify the cause-effect inference by the staggered duration through separate baseline phases. The proposed study includes five people with RRMS, who will follow an intervention protocol which includes in-phase bilateral movements of the upper limbs, adapted to different sports activities and to functional training. The aim of the study is to investigate the effects of in-phase bilateral exercises on corticospinal plasticity and on clinical measures, using transcranial magnetic stimulation and standardized clinical assessment. To meet quality standards, the present study has been designed and will be conducted according to the "What Works Clearinghouse" criteria for single case studies.


Clinical Trial Description

Relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) is the most common type of multiple sclerosis characterized by periods of relapses and generating various motor symptoms. These symptoms are associated with the corticospinal tract integrity neuroplasticity. The corticospinal tract is one of the major motor descending pathways providing voluntary motor function in humans. The neuroplasticity of the corticospinal tract, as defined by changes in neuron structure or function detected either directly from measures of individual neurons or inferred from measures taken across populations of neurons, is an essential factor that predicts clinical recovery in the post-relapse stage of people with RRMS. Corticospinal plasticity can be probed using Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) and characterized via certain TMS-specific neurophysiological measures. Corticospinal plasticity is exercise-dependent and influenced by various factors, such as aerobic exercise, resistance training, as well as interlimb coordination. Previous studies that assessed corticospinal plasticity using TMS in healthy participants and in chronic stroke survivors, reported that interlimb coordination and especially in-phase bilateral movement has the strongest effect on corticospinal plasticity. Despite the broad literature on the effects of different types of exercises on the neuroplasticity in people with RRMS, it is unclear whether in-phase bilateral exercises can promote motor related neuroplastic changes in RRMS. In light of evidence that people with RRMS have bilateral cortical lesions, which cause bilateral changes of corticospinal tract integrity, these findings raise the question about the effects of in-phase bilateral exercises on corticospinal plasticity. Such effects would provide strong evidence about whether exercise, in particular in-phase bilateral exercise, can influence the corticospinal plasticity in RRMS. The aim of this concurrent multiple baseline design study is to investigate the effects of in-phase bilateral exercises on corticospinal plasticity and on clinical measures using TMS and standardized clinical assessment, in five people with RRMS. The intervention protocol will last for 12 consecutive weeks (30-60 minutes /session x 3 sessions/week) and include in-phase bilateral movements of the upper limbs, adapted to different sports activities and to functional training. To define functional relation between the intervention and the results on corticospinal plasticity (i.e., resting motor threshold, motor evoked potential amplitude, latency) and on clinical measures (i.e., balance, gait, bilateral hand dexterity and strength, cognitive function), the investigators will perform a visual analysis followed by multilevel modelling and the single case educational design specific mean difference in order to estimate the magnitude of the effect size across cases. Visual analysis will conducted first, in order to determine whether there is a functional relationship between the intervention and the outcome measures. During the visual analysis, six features of the research design graphed data will be examined: level, trend, stability, immediacy of the effect, overlap, and consistency. Over the within-phase examination an evaluation of level, trend and stability will be examined. Level will be reported from the mean score of each dependent variable and trend will determine whether the data points are monotonically decreased or increased. Stability will be estimated based on the percentage of data points falling within 15% of the phase median, if this is higher than 80% then we assume that this criterion is met. Additionally, over the between-phase examination an evaluation of overlapping data among baseline and intervention phases, consistency of data patterns and immediacy of effect will be performed. The Percentage of Non-overlapping Data index will be used to quantify the proportion of data points in the intervention phase that do not overlap with the baseline phase and the test statistic will be calculated using the Improvement Rate Difference as an effect size index. Immediacy of the effect will be examined by comparing changes in level between the last three data points of one phase and the three first data points of the next phase. Furthermore, consistency of data patterns involves the observation of the data from all phases within the same condition, with greater consistency expressing greater causal relation. Each feature will be assessed individually and collectively across to all participants and to all phases. Consequently, if the intervention protocol is the sole determinant of improvement, the investigators expect to find indicators of improvement only at the intervention phase. Secondly, a quantitative analysis methods will conducted so to evaluate the magnitude of the intervention effect, provided there is evidence from the visual analysis. The investigators will perform all neurophysiological and clinical assessments to each participant according to the number of data points during each phase (i.e., baseline, intervention, follow up). In order to estimate the individual-level effect sizes, three different methods will be used, as suggested by 'What Works Clearinghouse', the standardized mean difference (Cohen's d), the standardized mean difference with correction for small sample sizes (Hedges' g) and piecewise regression analysis which does not only reflect the immediate intervention effect, but also the intervention effect across time. Multilevel modelling, which is recommended by the 'What Works Clearinghouse' and the single case educational design, specific mean difference index will be used to estimate the magnitude of the effect across cases and compared to the effect obtained by the single level estimates. All tests will be two sided. Statistical analysis will be performed using the statistical software R (https://www.r-project.org/). ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05367947
Study type Interventional
Source Cyprus University of Technology
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date March 10, 2023
Completion date October 13, 2023

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT05528666 - Risk Perception in Multiple Sclerosis
Completed NCT03608527 - Adaptive Plasticity Following Rehabilitation in Multiple Sclerosis N/A
Recruiting NCT05532943 - Evaluate the Safety and Efficacy of Allogeneic Umbilical Cord Mesenchymal Stem Cells in Patients With Multiple Sclerosis Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT02486640 - Evaluation of Potential Predictors of Adherence by Investigating a Representative Cohort of Multiple Sclerosis (MS) Patients in Germany Treated With Betaferon
Completed NCT01324232 - Safety and Efficacy of AVP-923 in the Treatment of Central Neuropathic Pain in Multiple Sclerosis Phase 2
Completed NCT04546698 - 5-HT7 Receptor Implication in Inflammatory Mechanisms in Multiple Sclerosis
Active, not recruiting NCT04380220 - Coagulation/Complement Activation and Cerebral Hypoperfusion in Relapsing-remitting Multiple Sclerosis
Completed NCT02835677 - Integrating Caregiver Support Into MS Care N/A
Completed NCT03686826 - Feasibility and Reliability of Multimodal Evoked Potentials
Recruiting NCT05964829 - Impact of the Cionic Neural Sleeve on Mobility in Multiple Sclerosis N/A
Withdrawn NCT06021561 - Orofacial Pain in Multiple Sclerosis
Completed NCT03653585 - Cortical Lesions in Patients With Multiple Sclerosis
Recruiting NCT04798651 - Pathogenicity of B and CD4 T Cell Subsets in Multiple Sclerosis N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05054140 - Study to Evaluate Efficacy, Safety, and Tolerability of IMU-838 in Patients With Progressive Multiple Sclerosis Phase 2
Completed NCT05447143 - Effect of Home Exercise Program on Various Parameters in Patients With Multiple Sclerosis N/A
Recruiting NCT06195644 - Effect of Galvanic Vestibular Stimulation on Cortical Excitability and Hand Dexterity in Multiple Sclerosis Patients Phase 1
Completed NCT04147052 - iSLEEPms: An Internet-Delivered Intervention for Sleep Disturbance in Multiple Sclerosis N/A
Completed NCT03594357 - Cognitive Functions in Patients With Multiple Sclerosis
Completed NCT03591809 - Combined Exercise Training in Patients With Multiple Sclerosis N/A
Completed NCT03269175 - BENEFIT 15 Long-term Follow-up Study of the BENEFIT and BENEFIT Follow-up Studies Phase 4