Department of Physical Therapy and Human Movement Sciences, Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, 60611, USA.
Research Service, Edward Hines Jr. VA Hospital, Hines, IL, 60141, USA.
BMC Neurol. 2024 Aug 3;24(1):271. doi: 10.1186/s12883-024-03757-2.
Among ambulatory people with incomplete spinal cord injury (iSCI), balance deficits are a primary factor limiting participation in walking activities. There is broad recognition that effective interventions are needed to enhance walking balance following iSCI. Interventions that amplify self-generated movements (e.g., error augmentation) can accelerate motor learning by intensifying sensorimotor feedback and facilitating exploration of motor control strategies. These features may be beneficial for retraining walking balance after iSCI. We have developed a cable-driven robot that creates a movement amplification environment during treadmill walking. The robot applies a continuous, laterally-directed, force to the pelvis that is proportional in magnitude to real-time lateral velocity. Our purpose is to investigate the effects of locomotor training in this movement amplification environment on walking balance. We hypothesize that for ambulatory people with iSCI, locomotor training in a movement amplification environment will be more effective for improving walking balance and participation in walking activities than locomotor training in a natural environment (no applied external forces).
We are conducting a two-arm parallel-assignment intervention. We will enroll 36 ambulatory participants with chronic iSCI. Participants will be randomized into either a control or experimental group. Each group will receive 20 locomotor training sessions. Training will be performed in either a traditional treadmill environment (control) or in a movement amplification environment (experimental). We will assess changes using measures that span the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) framework including 1) clinical outcome measures of gait, balance, and quality of life, 2) biomechanical assessments of walking balance, and 3) participation in walking activities quantified by number of steps taken per day.
Training walking balance in people with iSCI by amplifying the individual's own movement during walking is a radical departure from current practice and may result in new strategies for addressing balance impairments. Knowledge gained from this study will expand our understanding of how people with iSCI improve walking balance and how an intervention targeting walking balance affects participation in walking activities. Successful outcomes could motivate development of clinically feasible tools to replicate the movement amplification environment within clinical settings.
NCT04340063.
在非卧床脊髓损伤(iSCI)患者中,平衡缺陷是限制其参与行走活动的主要因素。人们普遍认识到,需要有效的干预措施来提高 iSCI 后的行走平衡能力。增强自身运动的干预措施(例如,误差放大)可以通过增强感觉运动反馈和促进运动控制策略的探索来加速运动学习。这些特征可能有利于重新训练 iSCI 后的行走平衡。我们开发了一种电缆驱动机器人,在跑步机行走过程中创建运动放大环境。机器人对骨盆施加一个连续的、侧向的力,其大小与实时侧向速度成正比。我们的目的是研究在这种运动放大环境中进行运动训练对行走平衡的影响。我们假设,对于非卧床 iSCI 患者,在运动放大环境中进行运动训练在改善行走平衡和参与行走活动方面比在自然环境(无施加外力)中进行运动训练更有效。
我们正在进行一项双臂平行分配干预。我们将招募 36 名非卧床慢性 iSCI 患者。参与者将随机分为对照组或实验组。每组将接受 20 次运动训练课程。训练将在传统跑步机环境(对照组)或运动放大环境(实验组)中进行。我们将使用跨越国际功能、残疾和健康分类(ICF)框架的测量方法来评估变化,包括 1)步态、平衡和生活质量的临床结果测量,2)行走平衡的生物力学评估,以及 3)通过每天行走的步数来量化参与行走活动的情况。
通过在行走时放大个体自身的运动来训练 iSCI 患者的行走平衡是对当前实践的重大背离,可能会导致解决平衡障碍的新策略。从这项研究中获得的知识将扩展我们对 iSCI 患者如何改善行走平衡以及针对行走平衡的干预如何影响行走活动参与度的理解。成功的结果可能会激发开发临床可行的工具,以在临床环境中复制运动放大环境。
NCT04340063。