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A Research Protocol to Study the Priming Effects of Breathing Low Oxygen on Enhancing Training-Related Gains in Walking Function for Persons With Spinal Cord Injury: The BO(2)ST Trial

Brief episodes of low oxygen breathing (therapeutic acute intermittent hypoxia; tAIH) may serve as an effective plasticity-promoting primer to enhance the effects of transcutaneous spinal stimulation-enhanced walking therapy (WALK(tSTIM)) in persons with chronic (>1 year) spinal cord injury (SCI)...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Muter, William M., Mansson, Linda, Tuthill, Christopher, Aalla, Shreya, Barth, Stella, Evans, Emily, McKenzie, Kelly, Prokup, Sara, Yang, Chen, Sandhu, Milap, Rymer, W. Zev, Edgerton, Victor R., Gad, Parag, Mitchell, Gordon S., Wu, Samuel S., Shan, Guogen, Jayaraman, Arun, Trumbower, Randy D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10659019/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38028272
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/neur.2023.0036
Descripción
Sumario:Brief episodes of low oxygen breathing (therapeutic acute intermittent hypoxia; tAIH) may serve as an effective plasticity-promoting primer to enhance the effects of transcutaneous spinal stimulation-enhanced walking therapy (WALK(tSTIM)) in persons with chronic (>1 year) spinal cord injury (SCI). Pre-clinical studies in rodents with SCI show that tAIH and WALK(tSTIM) therapies harness complementary mechanisms of plasticity to maximize walking recovery. Here, we present a multi-site clinical trial protocol designed to examine the influence of tAIH + WALK(tSTIM) on walking recovery in persons with chronic SCI. We hypothesize that daily (eight sessions, 2 weeks) tAIH + WALK(tSTIM) will elicit faster, more persistent improvements in walking recovery than either treatment alone. To test our hypothesis, we are conducting a placebo-controlled clinical trial on 60 SCI participants who randomly receive one of three interventions: tAIH + WALK(tSTIM); Placebo + WALK(tSTIM); and tAIH + WALK(tSHAM). Participants receive daily tAIH (fifteen 90-sec episodes at 10% O(2) with 60-sec intervals at 21% O(2)) or daily placebo (fifteen 90-sec episodes at 21% O(2) with 60-sec intervals at 21% O(2)) before a 45-min session of WALK(tSTIM) or WALK(tSHAM). Our primary outcome measures assess walking speed (10-Meter Walk Test), endurance (6-Minute Walk Test), and balance (Timed Up and Go Test). For safety, we also measure pain levels, spasticity, sleep behavior, cognition, and rates of systemic hypertension and autonomic dysreflexia. Assessments occur before, during, and after sessions, as well as at 1, 4, and 8 weeks post-intervention. Results from this study extend our understanding of the functional benefits of tAIH priming by investigating its capacity to boost the neuromodulatory effects of transcutaneous spinal stimulation on restoring walking after SCI. Given that there is no known cure for SCI and no single treatment is sufficient to overcome walking deficits, there is a critical need for combinatorial treatments that accelerate and anchor walking gains in persons with lifelong SCI. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT05563103.