Motor Conditioning to Enhance the Effect of Physical Therapy

NCT ID: NCT04367623

Last Updated: 2022-12-09

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

TERMINATED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

10 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2020-12-09

Study Completion Date

2022-09-01

Brief Summary

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Spinal Cord Injury (SCI) affects person's ability to move and feel sensation from the body. About half of patients with tetraplegia (high level SCI) have an incomplete injury, i.e. have some sensation and control of muscles preserved and could recover some function of their upper limbs. In this study the researchers would like to increase the effect of physical therapy of the upper limbs by sensory-motor priming. To achieve this they will use Brain Computer Interface (BCI) controlled Functional Electrical Stimulation (FES) immediately prior to the physical therapy of the upper limbs. BCI will be operated by motor attempt (motor priming) which will activate the FES applied to participants' hand muscles to achieve movement (sensory and motor priming). Physical therapy in this study will not replace conventional therapy that participant receive as a part of their standard treatment. There will be two groups: a treatment group (BCI FES with physical therapy) and a control group (physical therapy only), each receiving 20 therapy sessions of matched duration (40-50 min) of their dominant hand. Based on power analysis and results from our study (Osuagwu et al. 2016, J Neural Eng) there will be thirteen participants per group matched by age and the level of injury. Therapy will be applied to dominant hand only, because of the limited time available for experimental studies on participants who are already under active rehabilitation programme. Primary measures will be functional outcomes (range of movement, muscle strength, grip force, independence) while secondary outcomes will be neurological outcomes (EEG activity) and quality of life measures. The outcomes will be compared between the treatment and the control group and between the dominant and the non-dominant hand of each participant.

Detailed Description

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Participants who decide to take part will be assigned to a treatment or a control groups. Both groups will have the same assessments and the same number of therapy sessions. Therapy group will have a training that consist of Brain Computer Interface controlled Functional Electrical Stimulation followed by physical practice of the dominant upper limb while the control group will have physical practice only. One experimental session including will last about 60 min for both groups (including setup and therapy) and participants in each group will receive 20 sessions, about 3 times per week.

1. Assesments There will be three assessments: an initial assessment within a week prior to the first therapy session, a final assessment within a week following the last therapy session and a follow up session 3 months after the last therapy session. Assessments will consist of qualitative and quantitative measures. It will comprise of assessments of motor functions, neurological functions and participants feedback on the therapy (questionnaires and. Interviews)
2. Therapy There will be 20 therapy sessions for each group 2.1. Therapy Treatment Group This will consist of 30 min of BCI FES followed by 30 min of physical practice of the dominant upper limb. We decided to include only dominant arm/hand from two reasons: Each participant can be their own control to compare the outcome between hands. The other reason is that it is not possible to find more than an hour free time in between of their regular physical therapies and other activities. 2.1.1. BCI FES Participants will be wearing an EEG device (Epoch, Emotiv) and will have several pair of self-adhesive FES electrodes attached to their arms, over muscles that control reaching and grasping. The exact location and number of FES electrodes will be patient specific and will depend on their functional ability.

Each therapy session will start with a 5 min long calibration (to set BCI parameters for that day) followed by training.

During calibration phase participants will watch a computer screen showing a hand squeezing a ball. Participants will imagine doing the same action while their EEG will be recorded. BCI-FES Upon seeing a visual cue (a small cross) on a screen, participants attempt to move their dominant arm and hand to achieve reach and grasp movement towards an object (e.g. a plastic bottle). They repeat this 30 to 40 times in total, targeting 30 successful trials. The number of trials is based on our previous study (Osuagwu et al 2016, J Neural Eng). During each trial, upon the appearance of cue on the screen, the participant has 10 seconds to attempt movement to activate FES. They will practice movements of one hand only so there will be only one type of cue. On a successful attempt, FES will be initiated for 10-15 seconds to complete reach and grasp movement. An anti-gravity support will be used to assist movement, if necessary. This might be mentally demanding for some participants, and they might require breaks in between trials. Thus although BCI FES effectively lasts about 10 min (the same as in our previous study) the whole BCI FES session will take about 30 min. BCI FES will be immediately followed by physical practice. It is not possible to wait for participants regular occupation therapy because of a relatively short duration of the motor priming effect (from the literature it is 10-30 min).

After 1st, 5th, 10th , 15th and 20th session participants will fill out NASA task load index questionnaire, which takes about 5 min. This measures their workload. 2.1.2. Physical practice Immediately after BCI FES, participant will have physical therapy for 30 min. The objects and devices typically used in occupational therapy, putty, pegboards, nut-bolt-boards, rings, etc will be used for reaching and grasping tasks. These tasks may change over time depending on the capability of participant. FES will not be used in this phase 2.2. Therapy Control Group Control group will receive 40 min of physical practice only, that will be similar to the physical practice in the treatment group. Total duration is based on the total duration of BCI FES (10 min) and physical practice (30 min) in the treatment group.

Conditions

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Spinal Cord Injuries

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Control

Patients receiving conventional hand therapy, time matched to the duration of total intervention in the Active group

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Brain computer interface based therapy

Intervention Type OTHER

Participants who decide to take part will be assigned to a treatment or a control group. Both groups will have the same assessments and the same number of therapy sessions. Therapy group will have a training that consists of Brain Computer Interface controlled Functional Electrical Stimulation followed by a physical practice of the dominant upper limb, while the control group will have a physical practice only. One experimental session will last about 60 min for both groups (including setup and therapy) and participants in each group will receive 20 sessions, about 3 times per week. The expected time needed for completion of 20 sessions is 7 weeks

Active

Patients receiving BCI FES prior to the conventional therapy

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Brain computer interface based therapy

Intervention Type OTHER

Participants who decide to take part will be assigned to a treatment or a control group. Both groups will have the same assessments and the same number of therapy sessions. Therapy group will have a training that consists of Brain Computer Interface controlled Functional Electrical Stimulation followed by a physical practice of the dominant upper limb, while the control group will have a physical practice only. One experimental session will last about 60 min for both groups (including setup and therapy) and participants in each group will receive 20 sessions, about 3 times per week. The expected time needed for completion of 20 sessions is 7 weeks

Interventions

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Brain computer interface based therapy

Participants who decide to take part will be assigned to a treatment or a control group. Both groups will have the same assessments and the same number of therapy sessions. Therapy group will have a training that consists of Brain Computer Interface controlled Functional Electrical Stimulation followed by a physical practice of the dominant upper limb, while the control group will have a physical practice only. One experimental session will last about 60 min for both groups (including setup and therapy) and participants in each group will receive 20 sessions, about 3 times per week. The expected time needed for completion of 20 sessions is 7 weeks

Intervention Type OTHER

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

1. Upper and lower age limit as above
2. Incomplete spinal cord injury at level C3-C8 or complete spinal cord injury (C3-C8) with a zone of partially preserved innervation
3. Sub-acute patients, likely to remain as inpatient during the period of study
4. Normal or corrected to normal vision

Exclusion Criteria

1. Self reported neurological conditions prior to the injury that are expected to substantially change the EEG signal (e.g. stroke, epilepsy, brain injury, Parkinson's disease)
2. Inability to understand the experimental task
3. Brain, brachioplexus or peripheral nerve damage occurring at the time of the spinal cord injury.
4. General contraindications for using FES (implanted devices, pregnancy, sensitive skin, automatic dysreflexia)
5. Halos (large neck supports surrounding head) preventing EEG recording
6. Inability to sit for 1.5 hour due to skin redness or sores
7. Infections and general poor health due to injury
8. Unable to speak English
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

80 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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University of Glasgow

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Aleksandra Vuckovic, PhD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

University of Glasgow

Locations

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University of Glasgow

Glasgow, , United Kingdom

Site Status

Countries

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United Kingdom

References

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Osuagwu BC, Wallace L, Fraser M, Vuckovic A. Rehabilitation of hand in subacute tetraplegic patients based on brain computer interface and functional electrical stimulation: a randomised pilot study. J Neural Eng. 2016 Dec;13(6):065002. doi: 10.1088/1741-2560/13/6/065002. Epub 2016 Oct 14.

Reference Type BACKGROUND
PMID: 27739405 (View on PubMed)

Other Identifiers

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GN19NE396

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id