Spinal Cord Injury Clinical Trial
Official title:
Improving Hand and Arm Function After SCI
Verified date | October 2013 |
Source | University of Miami |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | United States: Institutional Review Board |
Study type | Interventional |
The long-term goal of this project is to develop rehabilitation strategies that facilitate
optimal restoration of skilled hand use in individuals with spinal cord injury (SCI). The
objective of the studies proposed in this application is to determine whether a protocol of
massed practice + somatosensory stimulation (MP+SS) is more effective for improving skilled
hand use compared to a somatosensory stimulation (SS) alone, and to determine whether these
approaches are each more effective than traditional therapy (consisting of conventional
resistance training; CRT).
Specific Aim I: In individuals with chronic incomplete tetraplegia, quantify changes in
skilled hand use and sensory function associated with either: massed practice training
combined with somatosensory stimulation (MP+SS), somatosensory stimulation (SS), or control
(conventional resistance training [CRT]), and compare differences among groups. The
investigators hypothesize that:
H1.1: At the end of 4 weeks, gains in scores on standardized tests of skilled hand motor
function (Jebsen-Taylor Hand Function Test and Chedoke-McMaster Arm and Hand Activity
Inventory) and sensory function (quantitative sensory tests; QST) will be greater in
individuals who are trained using MP+SS compared to the SS and RT groups.
H1.2: At the end of 4 weeks, gains in scores on standardized tests of skilled hand motor
function and sensory function tests will be greater in individuals who are trained using SS
compared to CRT.
H1.3: At 6 months post training, motor and sensory gains will be retained by the MP+SS and
SS groups.
Specific Aim 2: In individuals with chronic incomplete tetraplegia, quantify changes in
cortical and spinal neurophysiology associated with either: massed practice combined with
somatosensory stimulation (MP+SS), somatosensory stimulation (SS), or control (conventional
resistance training [CRT]), and compare differences among groups. The investigators
hypothesize that, after 4 weeks:
H2.1: Measures representing cortical neurophysiologic function (i.e., motor-evoked potential
amplitude and location of cortical map) will show greater change in the direction of more
normal values in individuals who are trained using MP+SS compared to the SS and the CRT
groups.
H2.2: Measures representing spinal neurophysiologic function (i.e., F-wave and H-reflex
amplitude) will show greater change in the direction of more normal values in individuals
who are trained using SS compared to the MP+SS and the CRT groups.
H2.3: There will be a positive relationship between change scores associated with functional
outcome measures and cortical neurophysiologic outcome measures in the MP+SS group; there
will be a positive relationship between change scores associated with the functional outcome
measures and spinal neurophysiologic outcome measures in the SS group.
Specific Aim 3: In individuals with chronic incomplete tetraplegia, quantify changes in
self-assessment of quality of life and societal participation associated with massed
practice combined with somatosensory stimulation (MP+SS), somatosensory stimulation (SS) or
control (conventional resistance training [CRT]), and compare difference among groups. The
investigators hypothesize that:
H3.1: Gains in scores on standardized measures of quality of life (Medical Outcomes Study
Short Form 36 [SF-36]) and societal participation (Impact on Participation and Autonomy
Questionnaire [IPAQ]) will be greater in individuals who are trained using MP+SS compared to
both the SS and the CRT groups.
H3.2: Gains in scores on standardized measures of quality of life and societal participation
will be greater in individuals who are trained using SS compared to the CRT group.
H3.3: At 6 months post training, gains in the quality of life and the societal participation
measures will be retained by the MP+SS and SS groups.
Risks: This is a low risk study that investigates the effects of standard rehabilitation and
exercise interventions on hand/arm function in individuals with SCI. All devices are
considered minimal risk devices by the FDA.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 48 |
Est. completion date | August 2013 |
Est. primary completion date | August 2013 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 16 Years to 70 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - traumatic spinal cord injury of at least one-year duration - injury to cervical spinal cord at C7 or higher - sufficient strength of thenar muscles to generate, at minimum, a visible twitch contraction in at least one thumb Exclusion Criteria: - history of head trauma and/or cognitive deficit - subject history of stroke, seizures or other intracranial disease - family history of seizures - inability to provide informed consent |
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis | Miami | Florida |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Miami | National Institutes of Health (NIH) |
United States,
Beekhuizen KS, Field-Fote EC. Massed practice versus massed practice with stimulation: effects on upper extremity function and cortical plasticity in individuals with incomplete cervical spinal cord injury. Neurorehabil Neural Repair. 2005 Mar;19(1):33-45. — View Citation
Beekhuizen KS, Field-Fote EC. Sensory stimulation augments the effects of massed practice training in persons with tetraplegia. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2008 Apr;89(4):602-8. doi: 10.1016/j.apmr.2007.11.021. — View Citation
Hoffman LR, Field-Fote EC. Cortical reorganization following bimanual training and somatosensory stimulation in cervical spinal cord injury: a case report. Phys Ther. 2007 Feb;87(2):208-23. Epub 2007 Jan 9. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | The Jebsen-Taylor Hand Function Test | The Jebsen Test is an assessment of hand function and improvement in hand function associated with therapeutic procedures. Individuals with cervical SCI are included in the target population for use of the test. The test is comprised of 7 subtests, including writing, turning over cards, picking up small common objects, simulated feeding, stacking checkers, picking up large light objects, and picking up large heavy objects. | 4 weeks | No |
Secondary | Cortical motor excitability via transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) | The motor threshold (intensity required to evoke 5/10 motor evoked potentials), a recruitment curve (from 80% of the motor threshold to the maximum stimulator output, in increments of 20%), and the thenar motor map (number of active sites for the thenar muscles in the hand motor cortical distribution) will be recorded via TMS. | 4 weeks | No |
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