View clinical trials related to Spinal Cord Injury.
Filter by:The purpose of this research study is to learn more about how patterns of brain activity change during different thinking tasks and how these changes relate to the intensity and unpleasantness of the neuropathic pain that people with SCI experience.
It is postulated that high frequency repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) can decrease the corticospinal inhibition and enhance the motor recovery. This study is aimed to investigate the effect of high frequency rTMS on lower extremity motor recovery and gait parameters in patients with chronic motor incomplete traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI).
Establish if change from the baseline in ultrasound muscle parameters over 2 months of rehabilitation correlates with functional status of SCI patients at the end of rehabilitation
This research study is being done to test a new device developed for spinal cord injury (SCI) patients. The purpose of this study is to collect data on how the nervous system signals travel within the spinal cord of SCI patients. Once the investigators understand that, they hope to develop a device that may help rehabilitation of SCI patients so that they can regain function in their lower limbs. This study involves some imaging studies (e.g. X-rays etc.), surgical implantation of a portion of the electrical stimulation device, various assessments of body function (e.g. balance, movement, gait), and physical rehabilitation procedures. What is new and experimental is the stimulation/sensing device (Intelligent Spine Interface - Commercial, ISI-C) that will be implanted.
This pilot study will evaluate the effects of a placebo anti-inflammatory diet in individuals with spinal cord injury. It is being performed to ensure that the placebo diet does not induce reductions in inflammation and also adequately conceals group allocation.
Spinal cord injury (SCI) leads to several health-related consequences often linked to reduced levels of physical activity. Direct stimulation of the spinal cord, either through implanted devices or surface stimulation, has been combined with intense physical therapy assisted treadmill walking to facilitate independent standing and stepping. These current methods require 3-4 highly skilled therapists and may not be feasible in all rehabilitation settings, especially when considering the growing number of SCI patients each year. Therefore, the use of robotic exoskeleton suits combined with direct stimulation of the spinal cord (requiring 1-2 therapists) may offer an alternative rehabilitation approach to overcome their limited abilities to stand and walk. Such improvements may also help to reverse or eliminate other health-related consequences associated with SCI. The pilot work will provide the preliminary evidence required to design future clinical trials for Veterans and civilians with SCI to restore overground mobility.
The STIMO-2 study aims to investigate TESS-supported rehabilitation training in sub-acute spinal cord injury (< 6 months post-injury). The primary endpoint of this study is to assess the safety and feasibility of TESS. The preliminary effectiveness of the therapy is the secondary study endpoint. The mobility recovery status of patients, who undergo TESS-supported rehabilitation, will be assessed at 12 months post SCI, compared to their predicted recovery expectations based on standard rehabilitation program
The proposed study is a pilot study intended to inform the hypothesis that regular walking in an exoskeleton within the home and community might offer health benefit, neurological recovery, and/or mobility benefit to the user. This exploratory pilot study is also intended to assess the level of compliance (i.e., exoskeleton use) among study participants by characterizing extent the device is used beyond the minimum required.
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of MT-3921 in subjects with spinal cord injury.
The study is designed to assess the role of functional neural regeneration collagen scaffold transplantation combined with epidural electrical stimulation in spinal cord injury patients.