Credit: University of Pittsburgh
A
neurotechnology that stimulates the spinal cord instantly improves arm and hand
mobility, enabling people affected by moderate to severe stroke to conduct
their normal daily activities more easily, report researchers from the
University of Pittsburgh and Carnegie Mellon University today in Nature Medicine.
A pair of thin metal electrodes resembling strands of
spaghetti implanted along the neck engage intact neural circuits, allowing
stroke patients to fully open and close their fist, lift their arm above their
head or use a fork and knife to cut a piece of steak for the first time in
years.
"We discovered that electrical stimulation of specific spinal cord regions enables patients to move their arm in ways that they are
not able to do without the stimulation. Perhaps even more interesting, we found
that after a few weeks of use, some of these improvements endure when the
stimulation is switched off, indicating exciting avenues for the future of
stroke therapies," said corresponding and co-senior author Marco Capogrosso,
Ph.D., assistant professor of neurological surgery at Pitt.
"Thanks to years of preclinical research building
up to this point, we have developed a practical, easy-to-use stimulation
protocol adapting existing FDA-approved clinical technologies that could be
easily translated to the hospital and quickly moved from the lab to the
clinic."
When it comes to strokes, doctors predict a grim future: Globally, every fourth adult over the age of 25 will suffer a stroke in their lifetime, and 75% of those people will have lasting deficits in motor control of their arm and hand, severely limiting their physical autonomy.
By using
electrical stimulation of the spinal cord, researchers from the University of
Pittsburgh and Carnegie Mellon University help restore arm and hand movement in
patients who survived severe strokes. Credit: Tim Betler, UPMC and the
University of Pittsburgh Schools of the Health Sciences
Currently, no treatments are effective
for treating paralysis in the so-called chronic stage of stroke, which begins
approximately six months after the stroke incident. The new technology,
researchers say, has the potential to offer hope for people living with
impairments that would otherwise be considered permanent.
"Creating effective neurorehabilitation
solutions for people affected by movement impairment after stroke is becoming
ever more urgent," said senior co-author Elvira Pirondini, Ph.D.,
assistant professor of physical medicine and rehabilitation at Pitt.
"Even mild deficits resulting from
a stroke can isolate people from social and professional lives and become very debilitating, with motor
impairments in the arm and hand being especially taxing and impeding simple
daily activities, such as writing, eating and getting dressed."
Spinal cord stimulation technology uses
a set of electrodes placed on the surface of the spinal cord to deliver pulses
of electricity that activate nerve cells inside the spinal cord. This technology is
already being used to treat high-grade, persistent pain. Additionally, multiple
research groups around the world have shown that spinal cord stimulation can be
used to restore movement to the legs after spinal cord injury.
But the unique dexterity of the human
hand, combined with the wide range of motion of the arm at the shoulder and the
complexity of the neural signals controlling the arm and hand, add a
significantly higher set of challenges.
Following years of extensive preclinical
studies involving computer modeling and animal testing in macaque monkeys with partial arm paralysis, researchers were
cleared to test this optimized therapy in humans.
"The sensory nerves from the arm and hand send signals to motor
neurons in the spinal cord that control the muscles of the limb," said
co-senior author Douglas Weber, Ph.D., professor of mechanical engineering at
the Neuroscience Institute at Carnegie Mellon University. "By stimulating
these sensory nerves, we can amplify the activity of muscles that have been
weakened by stroke. Importantly, the patient retains full control of
their movements: The stimulation is assistive and strengthens muscle activation
only when patients are trying to move."
In a series of tests adapted to
individual patients, stimulation enabled participants to perform tasks of
different complexity, from moving a hollow metal cylinder to grasping common
household objects, such as a can of soup, and opening a lock. Clinical
assessments showed that stimulation targeting cervical nerve roots immediately
improves strength, range of movement and function of the arm and hand.
Unexpectedly, the effects of stimulation
seem to be longer-lasting than scientists originally thought and persisted even
after the device was removed, suggesting it could be used both as an assistive
and a restorative method for upper limb recovery. Indeed, the immediate effects
of the stimulation enable administration of intense physical training that, in
turn, could lead to even stronger long-term improvements in the absence of the
stimulation.
Moving forward, researchers continue to enroll additional trial participants to understand which stroke patients can benefit most from this therapy and how to optimize stimulation protocols for different severity levels.
Source: Spinal cord stimulation shown to instantly improve arm mobility after stroke (medicalxpress.com)
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