High-Intensity, Dynamic-stability Gait Training in People With Multiple Sclerosis
NCT ID: NCT05735691
Last Updated: 2024-06-05
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
Get a concise snapshot of the trial, including recruitment status, study phase, enrollment targets, and key timeline milestones.
RECRUITING
NA
150 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2023-01-01
2027-06-30
Brief Summary
Review the sponsor-provided synopsis that highlights what the study is about and why it is being conducted.
Related Clinical Trials
Explore similar clinical trials based on study characteristics and research focus.
Pilot Trial of Backwards Walking in Persons With Multiple Sclerosis
NCT02759211
Effects of High-intensity Gait Training on Fatigue, Gait, and Neuroplasticity in People With Multiple Sclerosis
NCT06264336
The Neural Mechanisms of Split-belt Treadmill Adaptation in People With Multiple Sclerosis
NCT05878873
Dynamic Balance Training in Multiple Sclerosis
NCT04719494
High Intensity Interval Gait Training in Multiple Sclerosis
NCT05560880
Detailed Description
Dive into the extended narrative that explains the scientific background, objectives, and procedures in greater depth.
The proposed training interventions will consist of up to 30 sessions of up to one hour of treadmill training over approximately 10 weeks. Each training session will consist of a warmup period and assessment of intensity, followed by four 10-minute intervals of treadmill stepping (as tolerated) with 2-3 minute rest intervals in between and a cool down at the end. In the groups receiving perturbations, movements will be applied to the treadmill every 7-20 seconds in random direction: right, left, forward or backward. Safety will be assured using a fall arrest harness, which is worn at all times. Perturbation size will be determined using a four-accelerometer system (right foot, left foot, sacrum and C7) to obtain an estimate of margin of stability for right/left perturbations and dynamic stability index for anterior/posterior directions. Training perturbation size will be increased until the stability reaches the stability threshold. This perturbation size will then be used for the training session. The intensity of the training will be controlled by monitoring heart rate. The target heart rate will be 70-80% of age-adjusted heart rate reserve for high intensity training and 30-40% of age-adjusted heart rate reserve for low intensity training. Care will be taken to maintain a cool environment, with monitoring of heart rate, rating of perceived exertion and step count. Depending on initial conditioning, participants may need to start with lower levels of exercise at the beginning of the training period and gradually increase until the target dose is achieved.
Assessments of walking function will be made at four times. The first assessment (Baseline) will be made before training begins, a second assessment will be made after 15 training sessions (Mid-Training), a third assessment will be made after training (Post-Training) and a follow up assessment will be made six months after training (Follow-Up). Each assessment will take approximately one hour to complete a series of clinical function tests and laboratory measures of gait function. Specifically, each assessment will consist of measurements of self-selected gait speed, gait endurance, peak treadmill speed, cardiorespiratory fitness and balance confidence. In addition, dynamic balance during gait will be measured using the response to balance perturbations. These measurements will be made using full body motion capture during a set of perturbations in each of the four perturbation directions. Kinematics of the response to the treadmill perturbations will be quantified including measures of foot placement, center of mass movement, with calculations of margin of stability and dynamic gait stability. Additional details of trunk and joint kinematics will be made as secondary measurements. At Baseline, Post-Training and Follow-Up, the investigators will also measure community stepping by issuing each participant a step counter for a 14-day period. The step counter will record the timing of steps throughout the day. When the participant returns, the steps count data will be downloaded and analyzed. Falls will be assessed at Baseline using a survey and each participant will be provided a journal to document falls, with phone contact every 4 weeks through Follow-Up. The study staff making the assessments will be blinded to the treatment group. The training staff and participant will not be able to be blinded to the treatment, since intensity of training and treadmill perturbations cannot be hidden from them. The statistician will be unblinded, as they will assign the participants to the treatment groups and conduct the statistical analysis on the measurements provided by the study staff.
The effects of training intensity will be assessed using measurements of gait speed and endurance. The investigators expect significant increases in these measurements with high-intensity compared to low-intensity training. Perturbation training is not expected to affect gait speed or endurance. Instead, the investigators expect that perturbation training will improve balance while walking. Training intensity is not expected to significantly affect balance. Both training intensity and perturbation training are expected to improve community mobility, measured by the number of steps per day. The investigators also expect secondary effects from high-intensity training to include improved cardiorespiratory fitness. Similarly, perturbation training is expected to have positive secondary effects on falls and balance confidence. All together, the investigators anticipate that improvements in community mobility provided by high-intensity perturbation treadmill training will improve quality of life in people with MS.
Conditions
See the medical conditions and disease areas that this research is targeting or investigating.
Study Design
Understand how the trial is structured, including allocation methods, masking strategies, primary purpose, and other design elements.
RANDOMIZED
FACTORIAL
TREATMENT
TRIPLE
Study Groups
Review each arm or cohort in the study, along with the interventions and objectives associated with them.
High-Intensity With Pertubations
30 sessions of high-intensity treadmill training will be conducted. Perturbations that disrupt balance will be applied during the training.
High-Intensity Treadmill Training
Participants will walk on a treadmill at a speed that produces 70-80% of age-adjusted heart rate reserve or a rating of perceived exertion of 17/20. A total of 30, one hour sessions will be conducted. Training will be conducted in 10 minute bouts, with 2-3 minutes rest between bouts.
Treadmill Training with Perturbations
Participants will walk on a treadmill and a perturbation of the treadmill will be produced every 20s. Perturbations will randomly occur in the forward, backward, right or left directions, with a perturbation size set to 80% of stability threshold. A total of 30, one hour sessions will be conducted. Training will be conducted in 10 minute bouts with 2-3 minutes rest between bouts.
High-Intensity No Perturbations
30 sessions of high-intensity treadmill training will be conducted on a stable treadmill.
High-Intensity Treadmill Training
Participants will walk on a treadmill at a speed that produces 70-80% of age-adjusted heart rate reserve or a rating of perceived exertion of 17/20. A total of 30, one hour sessions will be conducted. Training will be conducted in 10 minute bouts, with 2-3 minutes rest between bouts.
Moderate-Intensity With Perturbations
30 sessions of moderate-intensity treadmill training will be conducted. Perturbations that disrupt balance will be applied during the training.
Treadmill Training with Perturbations
Participants will walk on a treadmill and a perturbation of the treadmill will be produced every 20s. Perturbations will randomly occur in the forward, backward, right or left directions, with a perturbation size set to 80% of stability threshold. A total of 30, one hour sessions will be conducted. Training will be conducted in 10 minute bouts with 2-3 minutes rest between bouts.
Standard Treadmill Training
Participants will walk on a treadmill at a speed that produces 30-40% of age-adjusted heart rate reserve. A total of 30, one hour sessions will be conducted. Training will be conducted in 10 minute bouts, with 2-3 minutes rest between bouts.
Moderate-Intensity No Perturbations
30 sessions of moderate-intensity treadmill training will be conducted on a stable treadmill.
Standard Treadmill Training
Participants will walk on a treadmill at a speed that produces 30-40% of age-adjusted heart rate reserve. A total of 30, one hour sessions will be conducted. Training will be conducted in 10 minute bouts, with 2-3 minutes rest between bouts.
Interventions
Learn about the drugs, procedures, or behavioral strategies being tested and how they are applied within this trial.
High-Intensity Treadmill Training
Participants will walk on a treadmill at a speed that produces 70-80% of age-adjusted heart rate reserve or a rating of perceived exertion of 17/20. A total of 30, one hour sessions will be conducted. Training will be conducted in 10 minute bouts, with 2-3 minutes rest between bouts.
Treadmill Training with Perturbations
Participants will walk on a treadmill and a perturbation of the treadmill will be produced every 20s. Perturbations will randomly occur in the forward, backward, right or left directions, with a perturbation size set to 80% of stability threshold. A total of 30, one hour sessions will be conducted. Training will be conducted in 10 minute bouts with 2-3 minutes rest between bouts.
Standard Treadmill Training
Participants will walk on a treadmill at a speed that produces 30-40% of age-adjusted heart rate reserve. A total of 30, one hour sessions will be conducted. Training will be conducted in 10 minute bouts, with 2-3 minutes rest between bouts.
Eligibility Criteria
Check the participation requirements, including inclusion and exclusion rules, age limits, and whether healthy volunteers are accepted.
Inclusion Criteria
2. Participants will have stable MS disease treatments. All medications will be consistent for at least 1 month prior to enrollment. No corticosteroids for at least 1 month and no botulinum toxin injections above the knee for at least 3 months prior to enrollment.
3. Participants will be between the age of 18 and 65 and have a body mass of less than 135kg (maximum mass for treadmill equipment).
4. Participants will be able to follow three commands, as determined by the three step command test of the Mini Mental State Exam.
5. Participants must have had no myocardial infarction in the past month, must not have uncontrolled hypertension (blood pressure must be \< 190/110 mmHg at rest), must not have a symptomatic fall in blood pressure when standing and must not have documented, uncontrolled diabetes.
6. Participants will be medically stable, with absence of concurrent severe medical illness including: existing infection, known significant cardiovascular or metabolic disease that limits exercise participation, significant osteoporosis (as indicated by known history of fractures), known history of vascular claudication or pitting edema, and known history of pulmonary complications that limits exercise capacity, including significant obstructive and/or restrictive lung diseases.
7. All participants must be able to perform walking training with passive range of motion within the limits of normal locomotor function, including: 0-30 +/- 10 degrees ankle plantarflexion, knee flexion from 0 to 90 +/- 10 degrees, hip flexion to 0-90 +/- 10 degrees.
8. Individuals who are undergoing concurrent physical therapy or supervised exercise by a trained professional will be excluded from the study to eliminate confounding effects of additional physical interventions. Other therapies, such as occupational or speech therapies, will be allowed as prescribed by their physician. Individuals will be allowed and encouraged to continue their normal exercise routines during the course of the intervention.
9. Participants must have no other concomitant neurological diseases, no history of epileptic seizures, peripheral nerve injury in lower legs or traumatic brain injury.
10. Participants must have adequate hearing (whisper test) and vision (minimum 20/80 corrected vision on a Snellen chart).
11. Participants must be able to walk for 10 meters at their preferred walking speed. For participants that require assistive devices to walk overground, minimal assistance will be provided to enable training until participants recover enough that they are not needed. The use of braces or orthoses is allowed in the proposed study to assure orthopedic safety. Participants will be excluded if they have factors that preclude stepping exercise, such as severe spasticity, excessive fatigue or exercise intolerance.
12. Women of childbearing potential will not be excluded, although women who are pregnant or who are considering becoming pregnant will be excluded due to the trunk and pelvis restraints required for safety during treadmill training.
13. Participants must be willing to commit to the treadmill training program schedule and participate in all of the assessments. They must be able to provide informed written consent and willing to be randomized to any of the 4 study arms.
18 Years
75 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
Meet the organizations funding or collaborating on the study and learn about their roles.
Indiana University
OTHER
Medical College of Wisconsin
OTHER
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
NIH
Marquette University
OTHER
Responsible Party
Identify the individual or organization who holds primary responsibility for the study information submitted to regulators.
Principal Investigators
Learn about the lead researchers overseeing the trial and their institutional affiliations.
Brian D Schmit, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Marquette University
Locations
Explore where the study is taking place and check the recruitment status at each participating site.
Rehabilitation Hospital of Indiana
Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
Marquette University
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States
Countries
Review the countries where the study has at least one active or historical site.
Central Contacts
Reach out to these primary contacts for questions about participation or study logistics.
Facility Contacts
Find local site contact details for specific facilities participating in the trial.
Other Identifiers
Review additional registry numbers or institutional identifiers associated with this trial.
4257
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
More Related Trials
Additional clinical trials that may be relevant based on similarity analysis.