Spinal Cord Injury Clinical Trial
Official title:
Abdominal Functional Electrical Stimulation to Augment Breathing in Tetraplegia
People with high spinal lesions are at risk of respiratory complications because they have partial or complete paralysis of breathing muscles. Previous work has shown that tetraplegic lung volumes can be increased by using abdominal FES during expiration. The technique is attractive because it is non-invasive, painless in tetraplegia and completely reversible. It may provide a treatment for augmenting the patient’s breathing both in the acute presentation of spinal injury (when half of cervical injuries require ventilation) and in long term management of tetraplegia and high paraplegia. We propose a pilot study in a small group of subjects to see if the technique is feasible from both a clinical and engineering viewpoint. The aims of the study are: 1)To examine the effects of abdominal FES on lung mechanics and gas exchange in tetraplegic subjects. 2)To optimise the stimulation pattern and intensity via electronic stimulators and to design a trigger to allow the FES to follow the subject’s own breathing cycle automatically.
Patients with high spinal cord injury (SCI) usually have paralysed intercostal muscles and
rely on diaphragm function alone for respiration. They have low tidal volumes and inadequate
cough. These patients are vulnerable to respiratory complications in the immediate
post-injury phase and remain at life-long risk of chest problems. Usual treatments include
intensive physiotherapy and intermittent positive pressure ventilation to augment the
patient’s tidal volume and to help clear excess secretions.
Tidal volumes can also be increased by electrical stimulation of the surface of abdominal
muscles during expiration. During stimulation the patient expires below functional residual
capacity (the amount of air left after normal expiration). The natural elasticity of the
chest wall then causes a recoil increase in the size of the next inspired breath. Functional
electrical stimulation (FES) of the abdominal muscles is theoretically an attractive
technique to augment respiration. It is non-invasive, it mimics natural physiological
processes and tetraplegic patients cannot sense abdominal discomfort. There are potential
applications in acute SCI patients to prevent the need for artificial ventilation and to aid
ventilator weaning. The technique could also be used in chronically injured patients to
augment ventilation.
Clinical staff at the Queen Elizabeth National Spinal Injuries Unit have collaborated
extensively with engineering and bioengineering teams from Glasgow University and the
University of Strathclyde in the use of FES in SCI. FES is already being used successfully
in the Unit for paraplegic cycling and upper limb exercise in tetraplegia. We have performed
abdominal FES on one SCI subject with complete diaphragm paralysis and produced a tidal
volume of one hundred millilitres (McLean and Hunt, unpublished observation).
Before starting a large scale project it is important to confirm whether we can reliably
reproduce at least some of the findings of Stanic et al. It would be very interesting if we
could show any change in gas exchange as well as simply increasing tidal volume. Engineering
issues include optimisation and programming of the FES stimulus. We propose a pilot study in
QENSIU to establish whether the technique is of practical benefit to spinal cord injured
patients.
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Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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