transcutaneous spinal cord stimulation (tscs)

  • 文章类型: Journal Article
    脊髓损伤(SCI)通常会导致毁灭性的运动障碍,显著影响受影响个体的生活质量。在过去的几十年里,脊髓电刺激似乎对受影响患者的运动恢复有令人鼓舞的影响。这篇综述旨在通过应用硬膜外电刺激来确定专注于运动功能恢复的临床试验。经皮电刺激,和功能性电刺激。几项临床试验符合这些标准,关注上述干预措施对步行的影响,站立,游泳,树干稳定性,和上肢功能,尤其是把握。经过全面的PubMed在线数据库研究,该综述包括37项临床试验,共192名患者。他们中的许多人似乎在功能上有所改善,临床评估或通过肌电图记录。这篇综述概述了电刺激技术可以帮助SCI患者运动恢复的各种方式。它强调了医学研究的持续需求,以完善这些技术并最终提高临床环境中的康复效果。
    Spinal cord injury (SCI) often leads to devastating motor impairments, significantly affecting the quality of life of affected individuals. Over the last decades, spinal cord electrical stimulation seems to have encouraging effects on the motor recovery of impacted patients. This review aimed to identify clinical trials focused on motor function recovery through the application of epidural electrical stimulation, transcutaneous electrical stimulation, and functional electrical stimulation. Several clinical trials met these criteria, focusing on the impact of the aforementioned interventions on walking, standing, swimming, trunk stability, and upper extremity functionality, particularly grasp. After a thorough PubMed online database research, 37 clinical trials were included in this review, with a total of 192 patients. Many of them appeared to have an improvement in function, either clinically assessed or recorded through electromyography. This review outlines the various ways electrical stimulation techniques can aid in the motor recovery of SCI patients. It stresses the ongoing need for medical research to refine these techniques and ultimately enhance rehabilitation results in clinical settings.
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  • 文章类型: Journal Article
    经皮脊髓刺激(tSCS)为患有脊髓损伤的个体和患有痉挛和步态缺陷的多发性硬化症患者提供了有希望的治疗选择。在治疗之前,检查者为受控应用确定合适的电极位置和刺激电流。为此,检查了腿对双脉冲的肌电图(EMG)中后根肌(PRM)响应的幅度特征。由于耗时的皮肤准备,这种费力的程序具有简化的潜力,传感器放置,需要专业知识。这里,我们研究了使用加速度计代替EMG来评估肌肉活动的机械描记术(MMG)。实施了有监督的机器学习分类方法,将加速度数据分类为无活动和肌肉/反射反应。将EMG反应视为基本事实。相对于经典EMG方法,基于加速度的校准程序在11名健康受试者和11名患者的组合队列中实现了高达87%的平均准确度。基于这种分类,确定的tSCS治疗的电流幅度为85%,与基于EMG的地面实况相当。在健康的受试者中,已经确定了治疗电流和位置,91%的结果与肌电图方法吻合良好。我们得出的结论是,MMG有可能使tSCS的调整在临床实践中甚至在家庭使用中可行。
    Transcutaneous spinal cord stimulation (tSCS) provides a promising therapy option for individuals with injured spinal cords and multiple sclerosis patients with spasticity and gait deficits. Before the therapy, the examiner determines a suitable electrode position and stimulation current for a controlled application. For that, amplitude characteristics of posterior root muscle (PRM) responses in the electromyography (EMG) of the legs to double pulses are examined. This laborious procedure holds potential for simplification due to time-consuming skin preparation, sensor placement, and required expert knowledge. Here, we investigate mechanomyography (MMG) that employs accelerometers instead of EMGs to assess muscle activity. A supervised machine-learning classification approach was implemented to classify the acceleration data into no activity and muscular/reflex responses, considering the EMG responses as ground truth. The acceleration-based calibration procedure achieved a mean accuracy of up to 87% relative to the classical EMG approach as ground truth on a combined cohort of 11 healthy subjects and 11 patients. Based on this classification, the identified current amplitude for the tSCS therapy was in 85%, comparable to the EMG-based ground truth. In healthy subjects, where both therapy current and position have been identified, 91% of the outcome matched well with the EMG approach. We conclude that MMG has the potential to make the tuning of tSCS feasible in clinical practice and even in home use.
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  • 文章类型: Clinical Trial
    Participation in physical and therapeutic activities is usually severely restricted after a spinal cord injury (SCI). Reasons for this are the associated loss of voluntary motor function, inefficient temperature regulation of the affected extremities, and early muscle fatigue. Hydrotherapy or swim training offer an inherent weight relief, reduce spasticity and improve coordination, muscle strength and fitness.
    We present a new hybrid exercise modality that combines functional electrical stimulation (FES) of the knee extensors and transcutaneous spinal cord stimulation (tSCS) with paraplegic front crawl swimming. tSCS is used to stimulate the afferent fibers of the L2-S2 posterior roots for spasticity reduction. By activating the tSCS, the trunk musculature is recruited at a motor level. This shall improve trunk stability and straighten the upper body. Within this feasibility study, two complete SCI subjects (both ASIA scale A, lesion level Th5/6), who have been proficient front crawl swimmers, conducted a 10-week swim training with stimulation support. In an additional assessment swim session nine months after the training, the knee extension, hip extension, and trunk roll angles where measured using waterproof inertial measurement units (IMUs) and compared for different swimming conditions (no stimulation, tSCS, FES, FES plus tSCS).
    For both subjects, a training effect over the 10-week swim training was observed in terms of measured lap times (16 m pool) for all swimming conditions. Swimming supported by FES reduced lap times by 15.4% and 8.7% on average for Subject A and Subject B, respectively. Adding tSCS support yielded even greater mean decreases of 19.3% and 20.9% for Subjects A and B, respectively. Additionally, both subjects individually reported that swimming with tSCS for 30-45 minutes eliminated spasticity in the lower extremities for up to 4 hours beyond the duration of the session. Comparing the median as well as the interquartile range of all different settings, the IMU-based motion analysis revealed that FES as well as FES+tSCS improve knee extension in both subjects, while hip extension was only increased in one subject. Trunk roll angles were similar for all swimming conditions. tSCS had no influence on the knee and hip joint angles. Both subjects reported that stimulation-assisted swimming is comfortable, enjoyable, and they would like to use such a device for recreational training and rehabilitation in the future.
    Stimulation-assisted swimming seems to be a promising new form of hybrid exercise for SCI people. It is safe to use with reusable silicone electrodes and can be performed independently by experienced paraplegic swimmers except for transfer to water. The study results indicate that swimming speed can be increased by the proposed methods and spasticity can be reduced by prolonged swim sessions with tSCS and FES. The combination of stimulation with hydrotherapy might be a promising therapy for neurologic rehabilitation in incomplete SCI, stroke or multiples sclerosis patients. Therefore, further studies shall incorporate other neurologic disorders and investigate the potential benefits of FES and tSCS therapy in the water for gait and balance.
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