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NCT05411692

Functional Electrical Stimulations With and Without Motor Priming Exercises in Spinal Cord Injury

Completed NA Last updated 20 July 2023
What this trial tests

NA trial testing Functional electrical stimulations and motor priming exercise in Spinal Cord Injury in 26 participants. Completed in 15 November 2022.

Timeline
15 March 2022
Primary endpoint
20 September 2022
15 November 2022

Quick facts

Lead sponsorRiphah International University
PhaseNA
StatusCompleted
Study typeINTERVENTIONAL
Allocationrandomized
Designparallel
Maskingsingle
Primary purposetreatment
Enrollment26
Start date15 March 2022
Primary completion20 September 2022
Estimated completion15 November 2022
Sites1 location across Pakistan

Drugs / interventions tested

Conditions studied

Sponsor

Riphah International University

Who can join

Adults 15 to 50, any sex, with Spinal Cord Injury. Patients with the condition only — healthy volunteers not accepted.

Sponsor's own description

As functional electrical stimulations has evident role in improving motor control in tenodesis function (power and precision grip) but its results are considered to be short term so addition of task oriented approach i.e. motor priming exercises could enhance the treatment effects . Priming is a mechanism that could easily be a part of a restorative occupational therapy approach, is a therapeutic method with the intent to improve function by targeting underlying neural mechanisms (neuroplasticity and motor control). This will yield the long term effects of priming augmented functional electrical stimulations to enhance the tenodesis function of patients with spinal cord injury. Their combination may produce improvement in hand functions dexterity in spinal cord injury patients.

Publications & conference data

1 peer-reviewed publication reference this trial (live from Europe PMC):

  1. Combining Therapeutic Strategies to Treat the Injured Spinal Cord: A Translational Perspective.
    Sherman BC, Schmidt Read M, Hoh DJ, Guest JD, et al · · 2025 · cited 2× · PMID 40929022 · DOI 10.1177/08977151251371710

Verify or expand the search:

Other recruiting trials for Spinal Cord Injury

Currently open trials in the same condition.

Other Riphah International University trials

Trials by the same sponsor.

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Data sources for this page

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