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The aim of this observational, non-controlled, non-profit study is to describe the responses to rehabilitative training with the robotic exoskeleton EKSO-GT in patients with incomplete motor Spinal Cord Injury (AIS C or D). Such rehabilitative tool is employed during inpatient intensive rehabilitation in a 3rd level Italian hospital. Safety and tolerability of the device are also assessed and described.
Full description
The locomotor training, defined as any "therapeutic program aimed at the recovery of walking through intense practice of the task of walking", is a very important part of the treatment plan for patients with locomotor dysfunction of the lower extremities and is aimed at retraining the nervous system, facilitating the recovery of muscle strength, improving balance and voluntary motor coordination. In fact, the majority of gait rehabilitation strategies is based on the concept of plasticity of the Central Nervous System and of "Central Pattern Generator": this plasticity is supposed to be facilitated by early, intensive and specific therapies, able to enhance the natural recovery processes.
The final goal is to help patients regain the highest level of personal autonomy which consequently translates also in a better overall quality of life.
The anthropomorphic robotic exoskeleton EKSO (Ekso Bionics, USA) is designed to assist in upright, weight bearing over ground gait training of people with weakness or paralysis of the lower limbs, due to a disorder, a disease or a neurologic injury. The training with EKSO is possible even in the presence of minimal forearm strength in order to resting to an upfront mobile walker. The device is available on the market for some years and it has recently been introduced in the clinical practice of some Italian rehabilitative centers. Montecatone Rehabilitation Institute acquired the most recent "GT" version of EKSO that enables variable, adaptive assistance.
This observational, longitudinal research study has a descriptive/exploratory intent. It aims at describing the responses to rehabilitative training with the robotic exoskeleton EKSO-GT in a cohort of incomplete motor Spinal Cord Injury patients (AIS C or D), as a rehabilitative tool in a setting of intensive inpatient rehabilitation (3rd level hospital). Safety and tolerability are also assessed and described.
This kind of study is justified by the fact that although the global network of professional users agree on the potential of such "young" technology on rehabilitation outcomes, few are the clinical data published in the scientific literature in relation to its use. It is believed that the results obtained from this study will be useful for the future definition of better protocols of use of the exoskeleton, more specific for the different types of SCI people.
Primary objective: to describe the responses to the robotic over ground gait training with EKSO-GT in an inpatient rehabilitative hospital setting, in people with incomplete motor SCI (AIS C or D). This objective is achieved by means of the administration of walking tests and the assessment of both lower limbs motor function and kinetic and endurance characteristics of walking.
Secondary objectives, description in the same patients' population:
All functional assessments are carried out when the patient does not wear the exoskeleton; however, functional gait specific test (10-meter walk test and 6-minutes walk test) are performed when the exoskeleton is worn and when it is not worn only by those patients able to accomplish those gait specific tests in such a way.
For gait specific tests the first evaluation with the exoskeleton worn is programmed to the third robotic rehabilitative session, as the first sessions are necessary for set-up purposes.
Data on the safety and tolerability of the EKSO-GT training are recorded at the beginning and at the end of each session, however a synthesis of safety outcomes will be carried out at predefine time frames.
The training with the EKSO-GT is carried out in addition to the "conventional" locomotor training and in the presence of specifically trained physiotherapists, always under medical supervision.
Patients undergo 12 or 18 rehabilitative EKSO sessions, 2-3 times per week, of max 1 hr each.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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