Neurophysiological Effect of Transcutaneous Electrical Spinal Cord Stimulation in Chronic Complete Spinal Cord Injury
E. L. McNicol, B. Osuagwu, M. Purcell, E. J. McCaughey, C. Lincoln, L. Cope, A. Vučković

TL;DR
A study on transcutaneous electrical spinal cord stimulation in people with chronic complete spinal cord injury found neurophysiological changes but limited functional improvements.
Contribution
The study is the first to investigate the neurophysiological effects of TESCS-ABT in individuals with chronic complete SCI.
Findings
Participants showed increased synchronized neural signals in high frequency bands.
Neurophysiological changes varied among participants and were influenced by limb dominance.
Improvements did not consistently translate into gains in strength or function.
Abstract
Transcutaneous electrical spinal cord stimulation combined with activity‐based therapy (TESCS‐ABT) holds promising potential for motor rehabilitation of spinal cord injury (SCI). However, its effectiveness in individuals with chronic complete SCI remains largely unexplored, despite recent evidence suggesting that many of these individuals exhibit signs of neurological incompleteness. This study was a prospective, single‐arm, open‐label trial that investigated the neurophysiological effects of TESCS‐ABT in chronic complete SCI and assessed whether any changes translate into functional improvements. Nine participants with chronic complete SCI were recruited for a two‐phase trial, including 6 weeks of FES‐conditioning and 16 weeks of TESCS‐ABT. Neurophysiological, neurological and functional assessments were conducted at six timepoints throughout the study: baseline; after the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpinal Cord Injury Research · Nerve Injury and Rehabilitation · Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Studies
