Impaired Interlimb Coordination During Locomotion in Individuals With Chronic Stroke: Contributors and Effect on Walking Function

NCT ID: NCT07006818

Last Updated: 2025-12-05

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

Get a concise snapshot of the trial, including recruitment status, study phase, enrollment targets, and key timeline milestones.

Recruitment Status

RECRUITING

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

50 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2025-09-15

Study Completion Date

2028-04-30

Brief Summary

Review the sponsor-provided synopsis that highlights what the study is about and why it is being conducted.

Individuals with chronic stroke have long-term walking problems that limit community engagement and quality of life, lead to secondary disabilities, and increase healthcare costs and burden. These walking issues often persist despite rehabilitation. One novel target for stroke gait rehabilitation is interlimb coordination-the phase-dependent cyclical relation of the legs. Interlimb coordination is altered during walking after stroke, compromising walking stability, phase transitions, and responses to perturbation and contributing to motor compensation. It is unclear what neural pathways contribute to impaired interlimb coordination after stroke and what impact this has on walking-related outcomes.

This proposal consists of two aims to address these issues, with the long-term goal of developing therapeutic interventions to improve interlimb coordination and walking after stroke.

Aim 1 will identify which neural sources contribute to impaired interlimb coordination after stroke. During bilateral, cyclical recumbent stepping (analogue of walking), interlimb coordination will be assessed as relative leg phasing. During the task, transcranial magnetic stimulation and peripheral nerve stimulation will be applied to assess supraspinal, interhemispheric, spinal interneuronal, and sensory pathways. The relation of interlimb coordination with these outcomes will be assessed to determine potential contributors.

Aim 2 will test the association between interlimb coordination and walking after stroke. Interlimb coordination will be quantified during split-belt treadmill walking, and associations with walking speed, endurance, mobility, independence, daily activity, quality of life, and community engagement will be tested.

An additional exploratory aim will determine the effect of targeted neuromodulation on lower limb interlimb coordination. Electrical stimulation will be applied to three locations in a cross-over study: the primary motor cortex (supraspinal/interhemispheric), thoracolumbar spine (spinal interneuronal), and peripheral nerves (sensory).

Detailed Description

Dive into the extended narrative that explains the scientific background, objectives, and procedures in greater depth.

Walking problems are common, disruptive, and persistent after stroke. Of 9.4 million people in the U.S. with chronic stroke, most have long-term walking problems such as decreased walking speed and endurance, and \~36% (\~3.4 million) cannot walk independently. These walking issues have secondary impacts, including limited community integration, impaired quality of life, decreased physical activity, increased risk of other diseases and disabilities, and \~$56 billion in annual costs. Hence, a major goal of stroke rehabilitation research is to improve walking. Most walking rehabilitation approaches have focused on restoring neurotypical patterns in the more affected limb without regard for the less affected limb or focused on improving walking function (e.g., maximizing walking speed) without regard for how improvements are achieved. Unfortunately, walking limitations persist even after intensive rehabilitation, perhaps because these current approaches do not adequately address the complex neural control required for walking.

Interlimb coordination is essential for walking, but impaired after stroke. One construct that reflects the complex control of walking is interlimb coordination, the phase-dependent cyclical relation of the legs \[and arms\]. Bipedal locomotion cannot occur without interlimb coordination, and precise control is essential for stability, phase transitions, and responses to perturbations. After stroke, interlimb coordination becomes impaired. The investigators and others have shown that during bilateral, cyclical leg movements (e.g., walking and pedaling), the phase relation between the legs is abnormal and highly variable after stroke. Lower limb muscle activity has abnormal timing and amplitude that is exacerbated during bilateral movements, and ankle motor control is worse during bilateral than unilateral movement.

Impaired interlimb coordination may contribute to worsened walking-related outcomes. Impaired interlimb coordination after stroke increases metabolic cost of walking, compromises responses to perturbation, and contributes to detrimental behaviors like motor compensation. However, it is unclear how impaired interlimb coordination impacts walking. Some studies have shown that impaired interlimb coordination is related to reduced walking speed (or pedaling velocity), but others have found no association. Although the relation of walking with interlimb coordination is unclear, related constructs (spatiotemporal asymmetry and variability) are associated with walking. Spatiotemporal asymmetry is associated with motor impairment and slower walking, and spatiotemporal variability is related to fall risk and reduced community ambulation.

Interlimb coordination is a distinct construct that is understudied. One reason why few studies have investigated interlimb coordination after stroke is that much prior work has used walking symmetry as a measure of interlimb coordination. However, less than 50% of the variance in interlimb coordination is explained by measures of symmetry, symmetry does not reflect the phase-dependent relation between limbs, and asymmetrical movements may be appropriate and well-coordinated. These data suggest that symmetry and interlimb coordination are distinct features of gait. Also, symmetry may offer limited insight into walking; improvements in symmetry and in walking are not associated, and targeting symmetry does not benefit walking more than other approaches. In contrast, measures that fully reflect interlimb coordination patterns during walking (e.g., muscle activation, kinetic, or kinematic patterns) may better inform walking rehabilitation.

Interlimb coordination has multi-level neural control, but which neural pathways contribute to impaired interlimb coordination after stroke is unclear. During walking, interlimb coordination is controlled via supraspinal, spinal interneuronal, and sensory pathways. Supraspinal motor regions have bilateral effects via ipsilateral uncrossed (e.g., corticospinal, reticulospinal) and interhemispheric pathways. Spinal interneuronal pathways control bilateral locomotor rhythms, and interlimb sensory pathways provide essential input to supraspinal regions, spinal circuits, and motoneurons. Each pathway contributes to interlimb coordination, and there is a complex interplay between pathways. Supraspinal descending pathways modulate spinal interneuronal and sensory pathways; sensory pathways are modulated by spinal interneuronal circuits; and spinal interneuronal circuits depend on sensory inputs. Stroke causes imbalanced transcallosal pathways and altered strength of bilateral motor tracts and causes secondary changes in descending supraspinal modulation of spinal interneuronal and sensory pathways, leading to altered function of these pathways For example, crossed limb reflexes, H-reflexes, and cutaneous reflexes all have abnormal timing and amplitude during walking and pedaling after stroke, and sensory loss is common after stroke. These changes may contribute to impaired interlimb coordination and walking disability after stroke. Despite its essential role for walking, there has been minimal work that investigates interlimb coordination and seeks to identify the neural sources of impairment after stroke.

Targeting interlimb coordination may improve walking. Most walking rehabilitation approaches have focused on restoring neurotypical patterns in the more affected limb with little focus on interlimb interactions or improving walking function (e.g., maximizing walking speed) without regard for movement quality. These approaches may have achieved limited success because they ignore the essential role of interlimb coordination for walking. Yet, few interventions have targeted interlimb interactions, largely because interlimb coordination has been conflated with symmetry and can be more expensive to measure. Interventions to target interlimb coordination during walking include: 1) promoting an antiphasic interlimb pattern (e.g., using visual or audio cues); 2) stimulating coordinated bilateral responses (e.g., perturbing walking surface stiffness on a variable stiffness treadmill to evoke responses to maintain coordination and stability); and 3) augmenting interlimb phasing errors with a split-belt treadmill to elicit aftereffect improvements in coordination. Repeated interlimb coordination training may yield improvements in walking. Moreover, determining the neural sources of impaired interlimb coordination could reveal additional targets for intervention. For example, neuromodulatory stimulation of supraspinal, spinal interneuronal, and/or sensory pathways may serve as a powerful adjuvant to interlimb coordination training.

The aims of this proposal address several issues that must be resolved before interlimb coordination can be effectively targeted: 1) identifying the relative contributions of supraspinal, spinal interneuronal, and sensory pathways to interlimb coordination impairments after stroke, and 2) determining the association between interlimb coordination and walking.

Conditions

See the medical conditions and disease areas that this research is targeting or investigating.

Stroke

Study Design

Understand how the trial is structured, including allocation methods, masking strategies, primary purpose, and other design elements.

Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

CROSSOVER

Primary Study Purpose

BASIC_SCIENCE

Blinding Strategy

SINGLE

Outcome Assessors

Study Groups

Review each arm or cohort in the study, along with the interventions and objectives associated with them.

Supraspinal direct current stimulation

Participants will receive 2 mA direct current stimulation for 20 minutes, with the anode applied to the ipsilesional primary motor cortex and the cathode applied to the contralesional supraorbit.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Direct current stimulation

Intervention Type DEVICE

Direct current stimulation will be applied at 2 mA for 20 minutes.

Spinal direct current stimulation

Participants will receive 2 mA direct current stimulation for 20 minutes, with the anode applied to the thoracic vertebra and the cathode applied to the non-paretic shoulder.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Direct current stimulation

Intervention Type DEVICE

Direct current stimulation will be applied at 2 mA for 20 minutes.

Sensory direct current stimulation

Participants will receive 2 mA direct current stimulation for 20 minutes, with the anode and the cathode applied to the cutaneous superficial peroneal nerve.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Direct current stimulation

Intervention Type DEVICE

Direct current stimulation will be applied at 2 mA for 20 minutes.

Interventions

Learn about the drugs, procedures, or behavioral strategies being tested and how they are applied within this trial.

Direct current stimulation

Direct current stimulation will be applied at 2 mA for 20 minutes.

Intervention Type DEVICE

Eligibility Criteria

Check the participation requirements, including inclusion and exclusion rules, age limits, and whether healthy volunteers are accepted.

Inclusion Criteria

* Age: 25 - 90 years of age
* Monohemispheric stroke
* Chronic phase (\> 6 months post stroke)
* Ability to walk for at least 6 minutes at a self-selected comfortable speed

Exclusion Criteria

* Lesions affecting the brainstem or cerebellum
* Other neurological disorders
* Current botox treatments for the lower limb
* Significant cognitive or communication impairment


* Previous adverse reaction to TMS
* Skull abnormalities or fractures
* Concussion within the prior 6 months
* Unexplained, recurring headaches
* Implanted cardiac pacemaker
* Metal implants in the head or face
* History of seizures or epilepsy
* Use of medications that could increase risk of seizure
* Current pregnancy


* Skin hypersensitivity at any sites of stimulation, including the scalp, thoracolumbar spine, and peripheral limbs
* History of contact dermatitis at any of the sites of stimulation
* History of allodynia and/or hyperalgesia
* Active skin infection
* Skin lesions
* Deep vein thrombosis
* Any other skin or scalp condition that could be aggravated by stimulation
* Implanted electronic, metallic, or highly conductive devices near site of stimulation that cannot be removed without permission from a health professional
Minimum Eligible Age

25 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

90 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

Meet the organizations funding or collaborating on the study and learn about their roles.

University of Illinois at Chicago

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

Identify the individual or organization who holds primary responsibility for the study information submitted to regulators.

Brice Cleland

Visiting Research Assistant Professor

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Locations

Explore where the study is taking place and check the recruitment status at each participating site.

University of Illinois at Chicago

Chicago, Illinois, United States

Site Status RECRUITING

Countries

Review the countries where the study has at least one active or historical site.

United States

Central Contacts

Reach out to these primary contacts for questions about participation or study logistics.

Brice T Cleland, PhD

Role: CONTACT

3129969056

Facility Contacts

Find local site contact details for specific facilities participating in the trial.

Brice T Cleland, PhD

Role: primary

3129969056

Other Identifiers

Review additional registry numbers or institutional identifiers associated with this trial.

UIC EXITO Pilot 2025

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

More Related Trials

Additional clinical trials that may be relevant based on similarity analysis.

Gait Recovery After Stroke
NCT06806748 NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Ankle Robotics After Stroke
NCT04594837 UNKNOWN NA