Functional and Structural Changes in the Central Nervous System Following Spinal Cord Injury

Status: Recruiting
Location: See location...
Study Type: Observational
SUMMARY

Building on recent improvements, state-of-the-art functional MRI will be applied as an advanced diagnostic tool for the lumbosacral cord in spinal cord injury (SCI) patients to characterize the remaining neuronal activity of the motor and sensory neurons. Alterations in the activity pattern will reveal the effect upon task-related spinal cord activity of the lower motor neurons and sensory neurons undergoing trauma-induced neurodegeneration, at a spatial specificity that has not been possible so far. Results of this study will be of crucial importance because SCI patients can only profit from regeneration-inducing therapies if spinal neuronal function is preserved below the level of lesion.

Eligibility
Participation Requirements
Sex: All
Minimum Age: 18
Healthy Volunteers: t
View:

• Age \> 18 years

• Informed consent

• Willing to take part and follow requirements of the protocol

⁃ Patients additionally need to fulfil the following study-specific inclusion criteria:

⁃ Cross-sectional study:

• Chronic traumatic SCI (\> 12 months after injury) or

• Diagnosed degenerative spondylotic myelopathy (DCM)

⁃ Longitudinal study:

• Acute traumatic SCI (\< 2 months after injury) or

• Patients with neurogenic lower urinary tract dysfunction (NLUTD) who undergo routine tibial nerve stimulation (TNS) treatment as part of their rehabilitation (but independently of this study) at Balgrist University Hospital

Locations
Other Locations
Switzerland
Balgrist University Hospital
RECRUITING
Zurich
Contact Information
Primary
Gergely David, Dr.
gergely.david@balgrist.ch
+41 44 510 72 13
Backup
Christian Kuendig, MSc
christian.kuendig@balgrist.ch
+41 44 510 72 08
Time Frame
Start Date: 2023-01-01
Estimated Completion Date: 2027-08-31
Participants
Target number of participants: 225
Treatments
Cross-sectional study: healthy controls
Cross-sectional study: chronic traumatic SCI patients
Cross-sectional study: non-traumatic SCI patients with degenerative spondylotic myelopathy
Longitudinal study: healthy controls
Longitudinal study: acute traumatic SCI patients (< 2 months after SCI)
Longitudinal study: patients with neurogenic lower urinary tract dysfunction
Related Therapeutic Areas
Sponsors
Collaborators: Swiss Paraplegic Research, Nottwil, Swiss National Science Foundation
Leads: University of Zurich

This content was sourced from clinicaltrials.gov