Spinal Cord Injuries Clinical Trial
Official title:
Novel Intervention to Influence Muscle Plasticity in Veterans
The loss of muscle contraction (paralysis) removes an important stimulus for maintenance of overall health for individuals with complete spinal cord injury (SCI). Increased protein catabolism (atrophy) limits important stresses to the skeletal system. Bone loss doubles the risk of fracture and contributes to increased mortality in Veterans with SCI. Metabolic syndrome and diabetes lead to heart disease in Veterans with SCI at higher rates than the general population. Exercise methods to sustain muscle tissue, bone density, and metabolic stability after SCI are lacking scientific justification. If left unchecked, the secondary complications of SCI can be health limiting or even life threatening to Veterans with paralysis. The importance of maintaining the health of the musculoskeletal system after SCI has never been greater as a cure for paralysis may become a reality. Contemporary rehabilitation interventions lack the ability to functionally load muscle tissue, quantify the dose of load, stress the cardiovascular system, monitor the overall stresses during daily exercise training, or offer portability to improve compliance with the exercise. The long-term goal of this project is to establish the optimal dose of muscle and bone stress during functional exercise in order to improve the health of Veterans with complete paralysis. The practical outcome of this research is to offer a form of activity that is feasible, portable, and grounded in sound scientific principles. The scientific goal is to understand whether the dose of force generated in paralyzed muscle via evoked contractions is critical to muscle atrophy/hypertrophy molecular pathways, physiologic performance, and insulin sensitivity. The investigators will administer various doses of muscle force by manipulating the frequency of electrical stimulation while keeping stimulation current (i.e. muscle fiber recruitment) constant. Interestingly, no previous study has examined the dose of muscle force necessary to trigger adaptations in protein synthesis/degradation pathways. The investigators wish to discover the most effective method to maintain the molecular and physiologic properties of paralyzed muscle. The investigators believe such a method will be in urgent demand as a co-intervention with pharmaceutical strategies in post-SCI rehabilitation.
Central Hypothesis: The investigators hypothesize that high muscle force induced via a
novel, portable, active standing intervention will increase muscle force properties, alter
gene expression for atrophy and fiber type pathways, and improve systemic insulin
sensitivity in Veterans with complete paralysis.
Aim 1: To determine the training effects of 3 tiers of quadriceps muscle force on muscle
physiological properties in Veterans with chronic paralysis from SCI.
Aim 2: To determine the training effects of 3 tiers of quadriceps muscle forces on muscle
mRNA for genes associated with atrophy and muscle fiber type in Veterans with complete
paralysis.
Aim 3: To determine the training effects of 2 tiers of compressive load induced by
quadriceps muscle forces on insulin sensitivity and markers of inflammation in Veterans with
SCI.
;
Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
| Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Active, not recruiting |
NCT06321172 -
Muscle and Bone Changes After 6 Months of FES Cycling
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT03457714 -
Guided Internet Delivered Cognitive-Behaviour Therapy for Persons With Spinal Cord Injury: A Feasibility Trial
|
||
| Recruiting |
NCT05484557 -
Prevention of Thromboembolism Using Apixaban vs Enoxaparin Following Spinal Cord Injury
|
N/A | |
| Suspended |
NCT05542238 -
The Effect of Acute Exercise on Cardiac Autonomic, Cerebrovascular, and Cognitive Function in Spinal Cord Injury
|
N/A | |
| Recruiting |
NCT05503316 -
The Roll of Balance Confidence in Gait Rehabilitation in Persons With a Lesion of the Central Nervous System
|
N/A | |
| Not yet recruiting |
NCT05506657 -
Early Intervention to Promote Return to Work for People With Spinal Cord Injury
|
N/A | |
| Recruiting |
NCT04105114 -
Transformation of Paralysis to Stepping
|
Early Phase 1 | |
| Recruiting |
NCT03680872 -
Restoring Motor and Sensory Hand Function in Tetraplegia Using a Neural Bypass System
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT04221373 -
Exoskeletal-Assisted Walking in SCI Acute Inpatient Rehabilitation
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT00116337 -
Spinal Cord Stimulation to Restore Cough
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT03898700 -
Coaching for Caregivers of Children With Spinal Cord Injury
|
N/A | |
| Recruiting |
NCT04883463 -
Neuromodulation to Improve Respiratory Function in Cervical Spinal Cord Injury
|
N/A | |
| Active, not recruiting |
NCT04881565 -
Losing Balance to Prevent Falls After Spinal Cord Injury (RBT+FES)
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT04864262 -
Photovoice for Spinal Cord Injury to Prevent Falls
|
N/A | |
| Recruiting |
NCT04007380 -
Psychosocial, Cognitive, and Behavioral Consequences of Sleep-disordered Breathing After SCI
|
N/A | |
| Active, not recruiting |
NCT04544761 -
Resilience in Persons Following Spinal Cord Injury
|
||
| Terminated |
NCT03170557 -
Randomized Comparative Trial for Persistent Pain in Spinal Cord Injury: Acupuncture vs Aspecific Needle Skin Stimulation
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT03220451 -
Use of Adhesive Elastic Taping for the Therapy of Medium/Severe Pressure Ulcers in Spinal Cord Injured Patients
|
N/A | |
| Recruiting |
NCT04811235 -
Optical Monitoring With Near-Infrared Spectroscopy for Spinal Cord Injury Trial
|
N/A | |
| Recruiting |
NCT04736849 -
Epidural and Dorsal Root Stimulation in Humans With Spinal Cord Injury
|
N/A |