Optimizing Contralaterally Controlled FES for Acute Upper Limb Hemiplegia

Status: Completed
Location: See location...
Intervention Type: Device
Study Type: Interventional
Study Phase: Not Applicable
SUMMARY

Impaired arm and hand function is one of the most disabling and most common consequences of stroke. The Investigators have developed Contralaterally Controlled Functional Electrical Stimulation (CCFES), an innovative neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) treatment for improving the recovery of hand function after stroke. The purpose of this study is to maximize the treatment effect of CCFES by adding stimulated elbow extension. The specific aims and hypotheses are as follows: AIM 1: Estimate the effect of Arm+Hand CCFES on upper limb motor impairment and activity limitation. Hypothesis 1: Stroke survivors treated with Arm+Hand CCFES have better outcomes on upper limb impairment and activity limitation measures than those treated with dose-matched Arm+Hand Cyclic NMES. AIM 2: Estimate the effect of adding stimulated elbow extension to Hand CCFES. Hypothesis 2: Stroke survivors treated with Arm+Hand CCFES will have greater reductions in upper limb impairment and activity limitation than those treated with Hand CCFES. AIM 3: Describe the relationship between treatment effect and time elapsed between stroke onset and start of treatment. Hypothesis 3: Patients who start Arm+Hand CCFES sooner after their stroke achieve better outcomes.

Eligibility
Participation Requirements
Sex: All
Minimum Age: 21
Maximum Age: 80
Healthy Volunteers: f
View:

• Age ≥ 21 and ≤ 80

• ≤ 2 years of first clinical hemorrhagic or nonhemorrhagic stroke

• Skin intact on hemiparetic arm and hand

• Able to follow 3-stage commands

• Able to recall 2 of 3 items after 30 minutes

• Medically stable

• Finger extensor paresis indicated by a score of ≤ 4 out of 5 on the manual muscle test (Medical Research Council scale)

• Adequate movement of shoulder and elbow to position the paretic hand in the workspace for table-top task practice

• Caregiver available to assist with device daily - OR - able to independently don elbow cuff on unaffected arm

• Full volitional elbow extension/flexion and hand opening/closing of unaffected limb

• Upper extremity hand section of Upper Extremity Fugl-Meyer (UEFM)≥ 1 AND ≤ 11/14

• Unable to simultaneously fully extend the elbow and fully open the hand toward tabletop object with arm unsupported (i.e. cannot voluntarily achieve the maximum passive range of motion (PROM) available)

• Functional PROM (minimal resistance) at shoulder, elbow, wrist, and hand simultaneously on affected side (i.e., there exists enough PROM to reach and acquire table-top objects).

• Able to hear and respond to stimulator cues

• While relaxed, surface NMES of finger extensors and thumb extensors and/or abductors produces a functional degree of hand opening without pain.

• While relaxed with the forearm supported with a mobile arm support, surface NMES of elbow extensors (triceps) produces functional elbow extension without pain.

• Patient must be able to sit unassisted in an armless straight-back chair for the duration of the screening portion of the eligibility assessment.

Locations
United States
Ohio
MetroHealth Medical Center
Cleveland
Time Frame
Start Date: 2013-01
Completion Date: 2018-08-31
Participants
Target number of participants: 67
Treatments
Experimental: Arm+Hand CCFES
Uses an electrical stimulator that opens the paretic hand and extends the paretic elbow in response to and with an intensity proportional to movement of the contralateral arm and hand. The treatment dose will be approximately 2 hrs per day of self-administered stimulation-mediated exercise at home plus 70 min of functional task practice twice a week in the laboratory for 12 weeks.
Experimental: Hand CCFES
Uses an electrical stimulator that opens the paretic hand in response to and with an intensity proportional to movement of the contralateral hand. The treatment dose will be approximately 2 hrs per day of self-administered stimulation-mediated exercise at home plus 70 min of functional task practice twice a week in the laboratory for 12 weeks.
Active_comparator: Arm+Hand Cyclic NMES
Uses an electrical stimulator that delivers stimulation to open the hand and extend the elbow repeatedly with preprogrammed timing and intensity. The treatment dose will be approximately 2 hrs per day of self-administered stimulation-mediated exercise at home plus 70 min of functional task practice twice a week in the laboratory for 12 weeks.
Authors
Jayme S. Knutson, Richard Wilson, John Chae
Sponsors
Leads: MetroHealth Medical Center
Collaborators: National Institutes of Health (NIH), Case Western Reserve University, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)

This content was sourced from clinicaltrials.gov