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There are over 7 million stroke survivors in the US alone, with approximately 795,000 new cases annually. Despite the best available physiotherapy, 30-60% of stroke survivors remain affected by difficulty walking, with foot weakness often being the main cause. Given that post-stroke gait impairments remain poorly addressed, new methods that can provide lasting improvements are necessary. Brain-computer interface (BCI) technology may be one such novel approach. BCI technology enables "direct brain control" of external devices such as assistive devices and prostheses by translating brain waves into control signals. When BCI systems are integrated with functional electrical stimulation (FES) systems, they can be used to deliver a novel physical therapy to improve movement after stroke. BCI-FES systems are hypothesized to stimulate recovery after stroke beyond that of conventional physical therapy.
Full description
Preliminary research indicates that applying this technique to foot weakness after stroke is safe and may improve walking function. Hence, this warrants further investigation to: 1. determine if BCI-FES therapy can provide lasting gains in walking in chronic stroke patients; 2. determine what factors influence BCI-FES therapy; and 3. explicitly elucidate the underlying neural repair mechanisms. First, a Phase II clinical trial in patients with foot drop due to chronic stroke will compare the effect of BCIFES dorsiflexion therapy to that of dose- and intensity-matched standard physical therapy (Aim 1). Comparing the improvement in walking speed and other secondary outcome measures between the two groups will test if BCI-FES therapy provides functional and neurological gains beyond those of standard physical therapy. The relationship between the patient baseline characteristics (walking speed, ankle function, stimulated muscle responses, brain wave features, sensation) and the outcomes will determine what features influence responsiveness to BCI-FES dorsiflexion therapy (Aim 2). Finally, the underlying mechanism driving the improvements of BCI-FES will be studied (Aim 3). Determining that BCI-FES therapy can provide improvements beyond that of standard therapy may lead to a new treatment for stroke patients. The underlying mechanism can inform the design of future physical therapy techniques or improve current ones. Finally, BCI-FES therapy may ultimately become a novel form of physical therapy to reduce post-stroke disability, and in turn reduce the public health burden of stroke.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
A major, active, coexistent medical, neurological (apart from stroke) or psychiatric disease (apart from stroke), including alcoholism or dementia, orthopedic injuries, that substantially affects gait. **Because old orthopedic injuries may or may not affect gait, at the discretion of the site's study PI, exclusion criterion #2 related to orthopedic injuries can be waived if the injury was not on the stroke affected side and the joint/muscles are back to normal motor and range of motion function.
A major medical disorder that substantially reduces the likelihood that a subject will be able to comply with all study procedures or safely complete study procedures. This includes, but not limited to documented serious cardiac conditions, serious pulmonary conditions, legal blindness, end stage renal or liver disease, pulmonary embolism or deep venous thrombosis.
Resting systolic blood pressure above 170, diastolic blood pressure above 100 at screening and baseline evaluations
Implanted electronic device (e.g. pacemaker) or skull metallic implants (e.g. cranioplasty plate covering the leg motor area);
Deficits in communication that interfere with reasonable study participation: language or attention impairment (score>1 on NIH Stroke Scale items 9 and 11, respectively)
Significant cognitive impairment, defined as Montreal Cognitive Assessment score < 22 (For those with aphasia: **Because Montreal Cognitive Assessment scores may be difficult to interpret for patients with aphasia, at the discretion of the site's study PI, exclusion criterion #5 ("MoCA score cannot be <22") can be waived)
A new symptomatic stroke occurs apart from the index stroke during the screening process and prior to randomization
Life expectancy < 6 months
Skin breakdown over electrical stimulation sites;
Received chemical denervation (eg Botox) to legs in the preceding 6 months, or expectation that chemical denervation will be administered to the leg prior to expected completion of the study
Unable or unwilling to perform study procedures/therapy, or expectation of non-compliance with study procedures/therapy
Pregnancy;
Significant pain (visual analog scale >4), chest pain, or shortness of breath with walking.
Receiving any outside concurrent physical therapy involving the lower extremities after enrollment in the study up to 1 month post treatment
Any general medical condition and psychosocial situation that substantially interferes with reasonable participate in study appointments
Non-English speaking, such that subject does not speak sufficient English to comply with study procedures
Concurrent enrollment in another investigational interventional study
Severe depression, defined as Geriatric Depression Scale Score >11: **Because Geriatric Depression scale scores may be difficult to interpret for some patients, at the discretion of the site's study PI, exclusion criterion #17 ("Geriatric Depression score cannot be >11") can be waived)
Concurrent use of FES orthosis for gait.
A new symptomatic stroke occurs apart from the index stroke during the screening process and prior to randomization
If TMS Eligible (note that potential subjects who do not qualify for TMS will not be excluded from the main study, they will only be excluded from undergoing TMS procedures):
TMS: Metallic hardware on the scalp (e.g. vascular clips or cranioplasty mesh)
TMS: Implanted medication pumps, intracardiac line, or central venous catheter
TMS: History of cortical stroke or other cortical lesion such as brain tumor
TMS: Prior diagnosis of seizure or epilepsy
TMS: Any electrical, mechanical, or magnetic implants
TMS: History of neurosurgery
TMS: uncontrolled Migraine headaches
TMS: Any current medications that affect seizure threshold such as tricyclic antidepressants and neuroleptics
TMS: Unstable medical conditions
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
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66 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
An Do, MD; Lucy Dodakian, OT
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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