grant

Spinal Cord Stimulation to Improve Motor Function in People with Post-Stroke Hemiplegia

Organization UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH AT PITTSBURGHLocation PITTSBURGH, UNITED STATESPosted 8 Sept 2022Deadline 31 Aug 2027
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY2025Activities of Daily LivingActivities of everyday lifeAffectAmericanAnimal ModelAnimal Models and Related StudiesApoplexyArticular Range of MotionAuthorizationAuthorization documentationAxonBehavior Conditioning TherapyBehavior ModificationBehavior TherapyBehavior TreatmentBehavioralBehavioral Conditioning TherapyBehavioral ModificationBehavioral TherapyBehavioral TreatmentBrainBrain Nervous SystemBrain Vascular AccidentCerebral StrokeCerebrovascular ApoplexyCerebrovascular StrokeCervicalCervical Portion of Spinal CordCervical Spinal CordCervical VertebraeCervical spinal cord structureCervical spineChronicClinicalClinical TrialsClinical assessmentsCollaborationsConditioning TherapyDataDevicesEEGElectroencephalogramElectroencephalographyEncephalonFeasibility StudiesFiberForearmGoalsGripsH-ReflexHandHemiplegiaHomeHumanIRBIRBsImplantImplantation procedureIndividualIndustrializationInstitutional Review BoardsInterventionJoint Range of MotionJointsLabelLateralLegLesionLinkLoad BearingLocomotionMeasuresMedulla SpinalisModern ManMotivationMotorMotor CellMotor NeuronsMovementMuscle ParesisMuscular ParesisNeurostimulation procedures of spinal cord tissueOperative ProceduresOperative Surgical ProceduresPainPainfulPalsyParalysedParesisPatientsPerformancePermissionPersonsPhasePhysiatric ProcedurePhysical Medicine ProcedurePhysical TherapeuticsPhysical therapyPhysiologic pulsePhysiotherapyPlegiaPulseQOLQuality of lifeRandomizedResidualResidual stateSensorySocial Support SystemSpinalSpinal CordSpinal Cord StimulationSpinal Cord TraumaSpinal TraumaSpinal cord injuredSpinal cord injuryStrokeSupport SystemSurgicalSurgical InterventionsSurgical ProcedureSystemTestingTherapeuticTimeTorqueTrainingTraumatic MyelopathyValidationWeight BearingWeight-Bearing stateWith lateralityWorkafter strokearmarm functionarm functionalitybehavior interventionbehavioral interventionbody movementbrain attackcerebral vascular accidentcerebrovascular accidentchronic strokecomparable efficacycomparative efficacycompare efficacydaily living functiondaily living functionalitydesigndesigningdetermine efficacydexterityefficacy analysisefficacy assessmentefficacy determinationefficacy evaluationefficacy examinationefficacy studyefficacy testingevaluate efficacyexamine efficacyfunctional abilityfunctional capacitygrasphandshemiparesishemiparetichemiplegichomeshuman datahuman subjectimplant placementimplant procedureimplantationimprovedimproved motor functionlong-term recoverymodel of animalmotoneuronmotor controlmotor deficitmotor function improvementmotor impairmentmotor recoverymovement impairmentmovement limitationneural controlneural regulationneuromodulationneuromodulatoryneuroregulationnoveloff-label applicationoff-label prescribingoff-label useparalysisparalyticpareticparetic musclepost strokepoststrokepre-clinical studypreclinical studyprimary outcomeprospectiverandomisationrandomizationrandomly assignedrange of motionrecruitrehabilitation after strokesafety testingsecondary outcomesocialstatisticsstroke hemiparesisstroke rehabstroke rehabilitationstroke survivorstrokedstrokessurgerysynergismtargeted drug therapytargeted drug treatmentstargeted therapeutictargeted therapeutic agentstargeted therapytargeted treatmentvalidationswhite matter damage
Sign up free to applyApply link · pipeline · email alerts
— or —

Get email alerts for similar roles

Weekly digest · no password needed · unsubscribe any time

Full Description

SUMMARY
Motivation: In the US, almost 800’000 people have a stroke every year. Unfortunately, despite intense physio-

therapy stroke survivors retain permanent arm motor deficits, some complete hemiparesis.

Project Goal: Here we aim at testing the efficacy of a system delivering electrical neurostimulation to the cervi-

cal spinal cord (SCS) to improve arm and hand motor control in people with chronic post-stroke hemiparesis

Hypothesis: SCS of the lumbosacral circuits below the lesion immediately restored leg movements and weight

bearing locomotion in humans with spinal cord injury by increasing strength and function. Moreover, SCS com-

bined to physical therapy led to long-term improvements that improved motor control even when the stimulation

was turned off. In stroke the spinal circuits controlling arm and hand movements are intact and located below

the brain lesion. Therefore, we hypothesize that SCS targeting the cervical spinal cord will enable people with

post-stroke hemiparesis to produce functional arm and hand movements, and that these improvements will en-

able the administration of a tailored behavioral training leading to superior long-term motor recovery.

Preliminary data: We implanted a human subject with post-stroke hemiparesis with lateral cervical spinal leads

and showed that SCS substantially improved, strength at every joint of the arm and hand, range of motions,

dexterity, clinical assessment scales (Fugl-Meyer +13) and functional abilities. Moreover, SCS did not induce

pain or discomfort at intensities that were necessary to obtain motor improvements. Finally, our industrial partner

(CorTec GmbH), is finalizing the tests to obtain IDE approval of a fully implantable pulse generator tailored to

SCS of the cervical spinal cord.

Approach: In the UG3 phase of our proposal (years 1 to 3) we will finalize the necessary validation on our

implantable cervical stimulator to obtain IDE approval. In parallel we will perform a pilot 30 days trial with con-

ventional clinical leads used off-label in subjects with stroke to optimize SCS implant procedures and SCS pa-

rameters for maximization of arm functional movements. Finally, in the last 2 years during the UH3 phase we

will execute an early feasibility study testing the efficacy of cervical SCS in combination with 4 weeks of physical

therapy to improve arm motor control in up to 20 subjects with chronic post-stroke hemiparesis.

Perspective: Our clinical trial will be the first to assess the efficacy of neurostimulation therapies targeting the

spinal cord in patients with severe hemiparesis, potentially leading to a paradigm-shift in stroke rehabilitation.

1

Grant Number: 4UH3NS123135-04
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Marco Capogrosso

Sign up free to get the apply link, save to pipeline, and set email alerts.

Sign up free →

Agency Plan

7-day free trial

Unlock procurement & grants

Upgrade to access active tenders from World Bank, UNDP, ADB and more — with email alerts and pipeline tracking.

$29.99 / month

  • 🔔Email alerts for new matching tenders
  • 🗂️Track tenders in your pipeline
  • 💰Filter by contract value
  • 📥Export results to CSV
  • 📌Save searches with one click
Start 7-day free trial →