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The proposed study is intended to inform the hypotheses that (1) regular dosing of exoskeleton walking will provide health benefits to non-ambulatory and poorly-ambulatory individuals with SCI, including decreased pain and spasticity, improvements in bowel and bladder function, decreased body-mass index (BMI), enhanced well-being; (2) regular dosing of exoskeleton walking will facilitate neurological or functional recovery in some individuals with SCI, particularly those with incomplete injuries; and (3) the level of mobility enabled by a lower limb exoskeleton is commensurate with the walking speeds, distances, and surfaces required for community ambulation.
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Study Outline Study 1, as described herein, will assess the three hypotheses, i.e., health benefit, neurological recovery, and mobility benefits, in the context of regular dosing of exoskeleton walking in a clinical setting. These studies will be conducted at three study sites, Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville TN, the James A. Haley Veterans Hospital in Tampa FL, and the Mayo Clinic in Rochester MN. All study sites will conduct an identical study protocol. The study will involve 24 non-ambulatory and poorly-ambulatory individuals with incomplete and complete SCI (i.e., 8 subjects at each site). In this study, "poorly ambulatory" is defined as persons with functional independence measure (FIM) gait score of 2 to 6 who may be able to walk short distances with or without braces and stability aid, or may be able to walk with assistance of one person, but whose primary means of mobility is a manual or power-operated wheelchair. Of the 24 individuals, half will be individuals with motor-complete injuries (i.e., American Spinal Injury Association Injury Scale, AIS, A or B), and half with motor-incomplete injuries (i.e., AIS C or D). As described subsequently in the Study Procedures section, the study will assess the therapeutic and functional effects of exoskeleton walking over an 8-week period of treatment, where the treatment consists of 3 walking sessions per week, each approximately 1.5 hours in duration for a total of 24 walking sessions. Therapeutic effects will be assessed via a number of measurements recorded primarily at study start, at the 4-week study midpoint, at the 8-week completion of treatment, and in a follow-up session, 8 weeks following the conclusion of treatment.
Study 2 will add 10 channels of functional electrical stimulation (FES )to the Indego exoskeleton , which include the quadriceps, hamstrings, gastrocnemius, and tibialis anterior muscle groups of each leg, in addition to a pair of trunk muscle channels. The nature of stimulation is fully consistent with standard-of-care FES units, although the timing and amplitude of the leg muscle stimulation is adjusted automatically by the exoskeleton, in a manner similar to the automated adjustment of stimulation in FES-aided cycling devices (also a standard intervention).
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41 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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