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RECRUITING
NCT05369520
NA

Non-invasive Spinal Cord Stimulation for Recovery of Autonomic Function After Spinal Cord Injury

Sponsor: University of British Columbia

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

This study is a pilot clinical trial to explore the efficacy of transcutaneous spinal cord stimulation (TCSCS) (proof-of-concept) in mitigating crucial autonomic dysfunctions that impact the health-related quality of life of individuals with spinal cord injury (SCI).

Official title: Non-invasive Spinal Cord Stimulation for Recovery of Autonomic Function After Spinal Cord Injury: Moving From Mechanisms to Clinical Practice

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

19 Years - 60 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

30

Start Date

2023-10-03

Completion Date

2027-10

Last Updated

2025-12-08

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DEVICE

TESCoN or SCONE device - Thoracic stimulation

TCSCS will be delivered using a non-invasive central nervous system stimulator (TESCoN or SCONE, SpineX Inc., CA, USA). The stimulation site will be over the thoracic spinal cord.

DEVICE

TESCoN or SCONE device - Lumbosacral stimulation

TCSCS will be delivered using a non-invasive central nervous system stimulator (TESCoN or SCONE, SpineX Inc., CA, USA). The stimulation site will be over the lumbosacral spinal cord.

Locations (2)

Blusson Spinal Cord Centre

Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

St Paul's Hospital

Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada