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Injuries and disease processes that produce upper extremity deficits are devastating to patients and their families. One potential avenue to treat these neurological disorders is through the enhancement of neural plasticity, which is the ability of the brain to reorganize and recover following insult. After a minor injury, the brain undergoes beneficial neural plasticity, compensating for altered neural activity to restore normal function. However, in the cases of moderate to severe injury and disease, e.g. spinal cord injury (SCI), insufficient or improper plasticity limits recovery, leaving patients with long-term disability. Therefore, methods that can drive robust and specific plasticity have great potential to treat neurological injuries and disease.
The Texas Biomedical Device Center (TXBDC) at UT Dallas has developed a groundbreaking therapy, called Targeted Plasticity Therapy (TPT), which pairs traditional motor, sensory, and cognitive rehabilitation with precise stimulation of the vagus nerve, to guide such robust and specific plasticity to treat a wide range of neurological deficits.
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The groundbreaking therapy developed at Texas Biomedical Device Center (TXBDC) , called Targeted Plasticity Therapy (TPT) pairs traditional motor, sensory, and cognitive rehabilitation with precise stimulation of the vagus nerve, to guide such robust and specific plasticity to treat a wide range of neurological deficits. The success of this concomitant therapy will be furthered, in part, through the development and use of mechanical devices aimed at measuring the effects of rehabilitation in patients with an upper extremity neurological deficit, e.g. from SCI. These devices are small hand controllers used to play simple video games that can also measure force and movement. Additionally, this study will be used to inform the future development of the rehabilitation game software as well as an optional game chair (in patients that use wheelchairs, the games can also be played from the patient's own chair).
To optimize the evaluation of these RePlay devices and software, and to decrease the time requirement for patients, research will be divided into two phases. Patients can participate in either one or both phases. Participation in phase II is not contingent on participation in phase I.
Phase I will involve 80 participants using the RePlay devices and games on a single visit. These 80 participants will be a collection of participants with no neurological disorders, participants recovering from stroke, those with Multiple Sclerosis, Parkinson's Disease and Spinal Cord Injuries. This will allow us to determine the ability of these patient populations to enjoyably use these devices and games compared with their degree of impairment. Participants' degree of impairment will be quantified by standard rehabilitation measurements for each disease process, including the ASIA Spinal Cord Impairment Scale, GRASSP, Jebsen Taylor Hand Function, dynomometry strength readings
In Phase II, 20 participants will be randomized equally to one of two groups. Each group will receive the same amount of therapy, only in a different sequence.
Group 1 will receive:
Group 2 will receive:
This will allow investigators to test the Replay rehabilitation software and hardware over 2 two week periods in order to evaluate the pattern of game play improvement in this population over time in different settings.
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36 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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