Clinical Trial: Effects of Breathing and Walking Treatments on Recovery Post-Spinal Cord Injury
Study Status: Completed
Recruit Status: Completed
Study Type: Interventional
Official Title: Intermittent Hypoxia and Locomotor Training: Effects Following SCI
Brief Summary:
Change to Reflect What Was Done and reason Changes Were Made.
The purpose of this study is to determine (1) if a specific breathing treatment (intermittent hypoxia) can promote changes in breathing function and (2) if pairing breathing treatments (hypoxia) with locomotor training can enhance the benefits of walking recovery observed with locomotor training alone (without breathing treatments).
Detailed Summary: Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a very disabling health problem. Paralysis and paresis of limb and trunk muscles are major consequences of SCI and result in the inability to walk or difficulty walking. The most commonly stated goal by individuals with SCI during rehabilitation is the desire to walk again. Locomotor training (LT) that uses a body-weight support system and treadmill (BWST) is a task-specific rehabilitation intervention that allows practice of walking at normal speeds while loading the lower extremities, facilitating upright posture, and hip extension. Substantial improvement in ambulation can occur following locomotor training (LT) in individuals with motor incomplete spinal cord injury (iSCI). Despite these advances in activity-dependent rehabilitation, a need exists for defining complementary strategies that further amplify endogenous neuroplasticity. The proposed study will assess the therapeutic potential of (1) a respiratory training intervention (acute intermittent hypoxia, or AIH) on breathing function and (2) a combined locomotor (LT) and respiratory (AIH) training intervention for enhancing walking recovery.
Sponsor: VA Office of Research and Development
Current Primary Outcome: Minute Ventilation - Phase 2 [ Time Frame: Pre- versus Post-treatment ]
Original Primary Outcome: Minute ventilation [ Time Frame: At the end of the treatment intervention (after 2 weeks) ]
Current Secondary Outcome: Ventilatory Loading - Phase 3 [ Time Frame: Pre- versus Post-treatment ]
Original Secondary Outcome:
- Propulsion generated during stepping [ Time Frame: At the end of the treatment intervention (after 2 weeks) ]
- Arm Swing [ Time Frame: At the end of the treatment intervention (after 2 weeks) ]
- Volitional arm and leg movement (voluntary activation deficits) [ Time Frame: At the end of the treatment intervention (after 2 weeks) ]
Information By: VA Office of Research and Development
Dates:
Date Received: January 5, 2011
Date Started: May 2010
Date Completion:
Last Updated: February 26, 2016
Last Verified: February 2016