Spinal Cord Injuries Clinical Trial
Official title:
Optimizing Spinal Cord Associative Plasticity to Enhance Response to Hand Training in Cervical Spinal Cord Injury
While physical exercise remains the foundation for any rehabilitation therapy, the team seeks to improve the benefits of exercise by combining it with the concept of "Fire Together, Wire Together" - when brain stimulation is synchronized with spinal cord stimulation, nerve circuits in the spinal cord strengthen - a phenomenon termed "Spinal Cord Associative Plasticity", or SCAP. This project will build on the team's promising preliminary findings. When one pulse of brain stimulation is synchronized with one pulse of cervical spinal stimulation, hand muscle responses are larger than with brain stimulation alone or unsynchronized stimulation. However, the team does not know the best ways to apply SCAP repetitively, especially in conjunction with exercise, to increase and extend improvements in clinical function. Do ideal intervention parameters vary across individuals, or do they need to be customized? The team will take a systematic approach with people who have chronic cervical SCI to determine each person's best combination of SCAP with task-oriented hand exercise. Participants will undergo roughly 50 intervention, verification, and follow-up sessions over 6 to 10 months each. The team will measure clinical and physiological responses of hand and arm muscles to each intervention. Regaining control over hand function represents the top priority for individuals with cervical SCI. Furthermore, this approach could be compatible with other future interventions, including medications and cell-based treatments.
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Enrollment | 10 |
Est. completion date | December 2026 |
Est. primary completion date | November 2026 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 85 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Age between 18-85 years. - Must have stable prescription medication for 30 days prior to screening. - Must be able to abstain from alcohol, smoking and heavy caffeine consumption on the day of each experiment. - Must be able to commit to study requirements (i.e., 53 visits over 6-10 months). provide informed consent. - Score of 1-4 (out of 5) on manual muscle testing of finger extension, finger flexion, or finger abduction in left or right hand. Exclusion Criteria: - Personal or extensive family history of seizures; - Ventilator dependence or patent tracheostomy site; - Use of medications that significantly lower seizure threshold, such as amphetamines, neuroleptics, dalfampridine, and bupropion; - History of stroke, brain tumor, brain abscess, or multiple sclerosis; - History of moderate or severe head trauma (loss of consciousness for greater than one hour or evidence of brain contusion or hemorrhage or depressed skull fracture on prior imaging); - History of implanted brain/spine/nerve stimulators, aneurysm clips, ferromagnetic metallic implants in the head (except for inside mouth); cochlear implants; cardiac pacemaker/defibrillator; intracardiac lines; currently increased intracranial pressure; or other contraindications to brain or spine stimulation; - Significant coronary artery or cardiac conduction disease; recent history of myocardial infarction and heart failure with an ejection fraction of less than 30% or with a New York Heart Association Functional Classification of Class III or IV; - Recent history (within past 6 months) of recurrent autonomic dysreflexia, defined as a syndrome of sudden rise in systolic pressure greater than 20 mm Hg or diastolic pressure greater than 10 mm Hg, without rise in heart rate, accompanied by symptoms such as headache, facial flushing, sweating, nasal congestion, and blurry vision (this will be closely monitored during all screening and testing procedures); - History of significant hearing problems; - History of bipolar disorder; - History of suicide attempt; - Active psychosis; - Recent history (>1 year) of chemical substance dependency or significant psychosocial disturbance; - Heavy alcohol consumption (greater than equivalent of 5oz of liquor) within previous 48 hours; - Open skin lesions over the face, neck, shoulders, or arms; - Pregnancy; and - Unsuitable for study participation as determined by study physician. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | James J. Peters VA Medical Center, Bronx, NY | Bronx | New York |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Bronx VA Medical Center | Bronx Veterans Medical Research Foundation, Inc, New York State Department of Health |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Amplitude of motor evoked potential at the first dorsal interosseous muscle. | The primary neurophysiological outcome will be corticospinal excitability measured at the FDI muscle. TMS recruitment curves will be collected. The amplitude of FDI muscle response at "S50" (the recruitment curve's half-maximal point) will be compared after the various interventions. | Through study completion, up to 10 months | |
Secondary | Pinch and grip strength | Maximal isometric pinch strength will be measured in key-pinch (lateral edge of the index finger and the thumb) and tip-to-tip (tips of first and third finger) configurations using a pinch dynamometer. Grip strength will be measured using a hand dynamometer. For each type of pinch or grip, three trials will be conducted by holding the dynamometer with maximal volitional force for 3-5 seconds, with at least 30 seconds or more between trials. The highest achieved value will be used for analysis. | Through study completion, up to 10 months |
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