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COMPLETED
NCT05778448
NA

BCI for Hemiparetic Upper Extremities in Patients Due to Stroke

Sponsor: The Hong Kong Polytechnic University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Non-invasive brain-computer interface (BCI) technology is one of the new training approaches to achieve motor restoration through a closed-loop system from brain activity through event-related desynchronization (ERD) after motor imagery (MI) or movement attempt to peripheral feedback triggered by an external hepatic device. Often, it is unclear whether the BCI intervention itself or the assistance of the external device leads to neural responses and functional gains. This study adopts a closed-loop BCI system involving ERD induced by MI. Functional electrical stimulation (FES) and virtual reality (VR) are simultaneously delivered as feedback. The aim is to investigate the efficacy of closed-loop BCI training combined with FES and VR on the recovery of the hemiparetic upper extremity of individuals with chronic stroke. Chronic stroke survivors are being recruited and randomly allocated into 3 groups: (1) BCI-FES-VR - participants look at an external screen displaying the VR avatar participant's arms while performing wrist dorsiflexion MI in random order (left or right). The BCI system detects the ERD of the motor area corresponding to correct MI. Then, visual feedback with the VR and motor-tactile feedback with the discharge of the FES is delivered; (2) BCI-FES - same procedure as group 1, but the difference is that the participant's hands replace the VR system; (3) BCI-VR - same procedure as group 1, but the FES is removed. Each session requires 240 MI trials with a training duration of 10 sessions in a 3-week interval. Motor and MI assessments are being conducted at post-assessment and at a 3-week follow-up. The findings of this study will provide significant new information regarding neurophysiological motor relearning mechanisms, which could inform the development and evaluation of BCI-based treatment for individuals with stroke and impact the field of translational neuroscience.

Official title: Brain-computer Interface (BCI) Based Closed-loop Training for Hemiparetic Upper Extremities in Patients Due to Stroke: A Randomized Controlled Study

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

30

Start Date

2021-08-11

Completion Date

2023-07-31

Last Updated

2026-06-08

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DEVICE

Brain Computer Interface/ Functional Electrical Stimulation/ Virtual Reality

A BCI system involves 3 main components - (1) brain activity collection, (2) external devices triggered by specific features of brain activity, and (3) a processor which decodes the brain activity signal and then translates it into computerized commands to control external devices such as virtual games and functional electrical stimulation (FES).

Locations (1)

The Hong Polytechnic University, Department of Rehabilitation Sciences

Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Hong Kong