Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT04032990
Other study ID # 19.0810
Secondary ID
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date November 14, 2019
Est. completion date February 2025

Study information

Verified date June 2023
Source University of Louisville
Contact Lisa Clayton, B.S.
Phone 502-333-8152
Email Lisa.Clayton@louisville.edu
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Children who suffer a spinal cord injury in the neck region have difficulty using their hands due to paralysis and/or weakness of their arms and hand muscles. The purpose of this project is to test the safety, comfort, and practicality of a new therapy that stimulates the spinal cord to facilitate activation of arm and hand muscles while practicing grasping, pinching, and reaching movements. The long-term goal is to provide better therapies that will improve the ability of children with SCI to more successfully play and accomplish everyday tasks using their arms and hands, similar to before their injury.


Description:

Adults with cervical spinal cord injury (SCI) rank gaining arm and hand function as the highest priority for improving their quality of life. Children with SCI, similarly experience paralysis of hand and arm muscles that limits their engagement in play and exploration typical for child development . Furthermore, pediatric-onset SCI disrupts the acquisition of motor skills involved in activities of daily living such as feeding, dressing and grooming increasing the child's dependence on a parent/caregiver. Current interventions teach persons with SCI to use a brace or splint to compensate for paralysis or weakness of hand muscles. Others are invasive requiring nerve or tendon transplantation and/or electrode implantation for functional electrical stimulation. Transcutaneous electrical spinal cord stimulation (TcStim) is a non-invasive painless technique that augments the intrinsic capacity of the spinal cord below the level of injury to generate patterned motor output. In adults with chronic SCI, TcStim acutely (immediately) augments trunk control and improves upper extremity function when combined with task-specific training. In children with cerebral palsy, TcStim in combination with locomotor training improves walking ability. Thus, the long-term objectives are 1) to investigate the therapeutic potential of TcStim for improving arm/hand function and 2) provide high quality scientific evidence to guide the clinical use of neurotherapeutic interventions promoting recovery in children with SCI. As children with SCI represent a vulnerable population, we first must establish the safety and feasibility of any potential novel therapeutic approach. Therefore, the specific aims of this proposal are to 1) determine proof-of-principle, safety and feasibility of TcStim for acute increase of hand/arm function in children with SCI and 2) determine the safety and feasibility of TcStim in combination with activity-based upper extremity training (AB-UET) across 40 sessions in children with SCI. For this pilot study 8-10 participants, ages 5-18 years with chronic, acquired SCI who have completed ≥ 40 sessions of activity-based upper extremity training (AB-UET) with neuromuscular stimulation will be recruited. For Aim 1, TcStim parameters will be optimized for arm/hand function. Arm/hand function will be assessed using the three tasks: overhead reach, forward reach and grasp and in-hand manipulation for no-TcStim and TcStim conditions measuring kinematics, electromyography of arm and hand muscles. For Aim 2 (safety and feasibility), two participants will undergo 40 sessions of AB-UET in combination with TcStim. To assess long-term safety and feasibility, participant compliance and any difficulties (i.e. risks, discomfort) will be documented and risk-likelihood/risk-benefit established. The long-term goal is to provide better therapies that will improve the ability of children with SCI to use their arms and hands with more success to grasp, reach and use their hands for everyday play and daily tasks.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Recruiting
Enrollment 10
Est. completion date February 2025
Est. primary completion date February 28, 2024
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 4 Years to 18 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - history of chronic, acquired SCI, (>1 year since injury); - SCI involves cervical and/or high thoracic (T1) levels - moderate to severe upper extremity deficit as assessed by the Pediatric Neuromuscular Recovery Upper Extremity Scale (scores less than 4A out of a 12 point range from 1A-4C on upper extremity tasks, e.g. including inability to fully reach overhead, grasp, or pinch without compensation) - discharged from in-patient rehabilitation Exclusion Criteria: - botox use within past 3 months; - current baclofen use - unhealed upper extremity fracture - any other medical complication limiting participation in the assessments and/or activity- based upper extremity training; - congenital SCI - total ventilator dependence

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Device:
Biostim-5 transcutaneous spinal stimulator
Safety and feasibility will be monitored during transcutaneous spinal stimulation in children with spinal cord injury

Locations

Country Name City State
United States Department of Neurosurgery Louisville Kentucky

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Louisville The Jewish Heritage Foundation for Excellence

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Incidence of skin irritation Skin color, particularly change in skin color to pink indicating irritation in the location of the stimulating electrode placement will be assessed prior to stimulation experiments and immediately after; incidence of pink- or redness or irritation and time (minutes-days) to dissipation will be recorded. within 2 months for Aim 1, within 3 months for Aim 2
Primary Faces Pain Scale-Revised (scale 0-10) Faces Pain Scale - Revised is a self-report measure of pain intensity developed for children (C.L. Hicks et al. Pain 93 (2001). It will be used to score the sensation of pain on 0 (min - no pain)-to-10 (max - worst pain ever) metric. The scale depicts 6 facial expressions: first - face with a neutral expression corresponds to pain score of 0, next facial expression is scored as 2, etc. The faces scale will be presented to the participant (ages 3-8) prior to the experiment for baseline measurement, during stimulation and following the experiment. within 2 months for Aim 1, within 3 months for Aim 2
Primary Visual Analog Scale (0-10) To assess pain in the participants ages 8 and above, Visual Analog Scale (self-reported measure) will be presented with 0 corresponding to no pain and 10 corresponding to the "worst pain ever"; the scale will be presented at baseline measurement, during stimulation and following the experiment. within 2 months for Aim 1, within 3 months for Aim 2
Primary Blood pressure continuous beat-by-beat blood pressure (mmHg) recordings will be made using Finapres finger cuff system for 5 minutes prior to and 5 minutes immediately following stimulation while the child is sitting; Brachial arm blood pressure will be periodically measured during stimulation (mmHg).
systolic and diastolic blood pressure values will be compared with the established norms for typically developing children (age and height matched);
within 2 months for Aim 1, within 3 months for Aim 2
Primary Number of requests to stop the stimulation Number of participants requesting (or number of request per participant within experimental sessions) to stop stimulation due to pain, fatigue or any other reason (documented) within 2 months for Aim 1, within 3 months for Aim 2
Primary Angular excursions of upper extremity and hand degrees of flexion/extension, adduction/abduction in elbow, shoulder, wrist, fingers within 2 months for Aim 1, within 3 months for Aim 2
Primary Hand Grip strength A hand grip strength dynamometer will be used to assess strength (Newton) within 2 months for Aim 1, within 3 months for Aim 2
Secondary Heart Rate heart rate (beats per minute) will be continuously monitored and recorded using 3-lead electrocardiogram. within 2 months for Aim 1, within 3 months for Aim 2
Secondary Compliance rate Compliance - number of sessions missed and reason, willingness to continue participation. within 2 months for Aim 1, within 3 months for Aim 2
Secondary Angular excursions of trunk during trunk control assessments trunk kinematics (degrees of flexion/extension) in cervical, thoracic and lumbar regions; within 2 months for Aim 1, within 3 months for Aim 2
See also
  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
Completed NCT03220451 - Use of Adhesive Elastic Taping for the Therapy of Medium/Severe Pressure Ulcers in Spinal Cord Injured Patients N/A
Terminated NCT03170557 - Randomized Comparative Trial for Persistent Pain in Spinal Cord Injury: Acupuncture vs Aspecific Needle Skin Stimulation 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