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Clinical Trial Summary

It has been hypothesized that there are two mechanisms of acute traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI): the primary mechanical damage and the secondary injury due to additional pathological processes initiated by the primary injury. Neurological damage due to laceration, contusion, distraction or compression of the spinal cord is called ''primary injury''. This mechanical injury leads to a cascade of biochemical and pathological changes, described as ''secondary injury'', which occurs minutes to weeks after the initial trauma and causes further neurological deterioration. This secondary cascade involves vascular changes, an inflammatory response, neurotoxicity, apoptosis and glial scarring, and further compromises neurological impairment after traumatic spinal cord injury. Edema, ischemia and loss of autoregulation continue to spread bi-directionally from the initial lesion along the spinal cord for up to 72 hours after the trauma. It has been postulated that the damage caused by the primary injury mechanism is irreversible and therapeutic approaches in recent years have focused on modulating the secondary injury cascade. Researchers found significantly greater numbers of myelinated fibers in peripheral nerves after a single ESWT application in an experimental model on rats after a homotopic nerve autograft into the sciatic nerve. In another study a spinal cord ischemia model in mice was performed. ESWT was applied immediately after surgery and the treated animals showed a significantly better motor function and decreased neuronal degeneration compared to the control group within the first 7 days after surgery. Researchers investigated the effect of low-energy ESWT for the duration of three weeks on a thoracic spinal cord contusion injury model in rats. Animals in the ESWT group demonstrated significantly better locomotor improvement and reduced neuronal loss compared to the control animals at 7, 35, and 42 days after contusion. It has been postulated previously, that ESWT improves the metabolic activity of various cell types and induces an improved rate of axonal regeneration. ESWT might be a promising therapeutic strategy in the treatment of traumatic SCI. The underlying study aims to investigate the effect of ESWT after acute traumatic spinal cord injury in humans within 48 hours of trauma in order to intervene in the secondary injury phase with the objective to reduce the extent of neuronal damage.


Clinical Trial Description

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Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04474106
Study type Interventional
Source AUVA
Contact Wolfgang Schaden, Dr
Phone 0043 5 9393 20170
Email wolfgang.schaden@auva.at
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date July 2, 2020
Completion date December 31, 2026

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT02917291 - Safety and Preliminary Efficacy of FAB117-HC in Patients With Acute Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury Phase 1/Phase 2
Recruiting NCT06243211 - Spinal Decompression Plus Nerve Graft Implantation Following TSCI N/A