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RecruitingSpinal Cord Injuries and Disorders (SCI/D)Spinal Cord Injury

Motoneuron Recruitment and Motor Evoked Potential Up-Conditioning (MEP) in Spinal Cord Injury (SCI)

Eligible age

18+ yrs

Accepts

All genders

Locations

1 state

Healthy volunteers

No

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About this study

The purpose of this research study is to examine the effect of a brain stimulation training to improve the function of brain-spinal cord- muscle connections. Because brain-to-muscle pathways are very important in our movement control, restoring function of these pathways may improve movement problems after injuries. Spinal cord injury causes damage to the brain-to-muscle connection. However, when the injury is "incomplete", there is a possibility that some of the brain-to-muscle pathways are still connected and may be trained to improve movement function. For examining brain-to-muscle pathways, investigators use a transcranial magnetic stimulator. Investigators hope that the results of this research study will help us develop new treatments for people who have movement disabilities. This study will require about 42 visits over the first 14 weeks, and another 6 visits over an additional 3 months. Each visit will take about 1 ½ hours.

Sponsor: Medical University of South Carolina

You may qualify if…

  • Adult (≥18 yrs old)
  • a history of injury to spinal cord at or above C6
  • neurologically stable (\>1 year post SCI)
  • medical clearance to participate
  • weak wrist extension at least unilaterally
  • expectation that current medication will be maintained without change for at least 3 months.
  • Stable use of anti-spasticity medication (e.g., baclofen, diazepam, tizanidine) is accepted. (Because only neurologically stable subjects will enter this study, medication changes will be unlikely.)
  • In participants with bilateral wrist extension weakness in whom Extensor Carpi Radialis (ECR) MEP can be elicited in both arms, the more severely impaired arm is studied. In participants with unilateral wrist weakness or in participants with bilateral wrist weakness in whom an ECR MEP can be elicited in only one arm, that arm is studied.

You may not qualify if…

  • motoneuron injury
  • unstable medical condition
  • cognitive impairment (because the studied intervention is a learning-based intervention)
  • a history of epileptic seizures
  • a pre-existing or confounding neurological condition (e.g., history of MS, Stroke, Parkinson's disease)
  • metal implants in the cranium
  • implanted biomedical device in or above the chest (e.g., a cardiac pacemaker, cochlear implant)
  • no measurable MEP elicited in the ECR

Where it's recruiting

South Carolina

Charleston

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · NCT07179822 · last updated 2025-11-26