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RECRUITING
NCT07165353
NA

Virtual Walking to Reduce Chronic Neuropathic Pain in Subjects With SCI

Sponsor: Swiss Paraplegic Research, Nottwil

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

About 70% of people with a spinal cord injury in Switzerland have chronic pain that lasts more than 3 to 6 months. This pain can be caused by muscle or joint problems, or by nerve damage (neuropathic pain). Neuropathic pain is often hard to treat, and current treatments may cause side effects or not work well. This study will test whether virtual walking from different visual perspectives can reduce chronic neuropathic pain and improve quality of life after spinal cord injury. We will also compare which perspective works best. To better understand how the training works, we will use two tests-quantitative sensory testing (QST) and contact heat-evoked potentials (CHEPs)-to measure changes in the pain and nerve systems.

Official title: Virtual Walking With Habitual Feedback to Reduce Chronic Neuropathic Pain in Individuals With Spinal Cord Injury

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 75 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

40

Start Date

2026-01-20

Completion Date

2027-11-30

Last Updated

2026-01-21

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Virtual Walking

This virtual walking therapy uses a life-sized video avatar of the participant walking through a forest environment. A green screen setup combines a live video of the participant's upper body with pre-recorded walking legs, creating a full-body walking illusion. The participant is seated in a modified wheelchair that tilts 2° to each side to mimic pelvic movement during walking. This approach differs from the sham condition (Group 2), which displays only the moving forest without an avatar or wheelchair tilt, and from the standard care group (Group 3), which receives no virtual walking therapy.

BEHAVIORAL

Sham Virtual Walking

Participants view a moving forest environment on a large projection screen for 10 sessions over 2 weeks (each up to 20 minutes). No avatar of the participant is displayed, and the wheelchair tilt function is disabled. This differs from the experimental intervention (Group 1), which includes a life-sized walking avatar and wheelchair tilt to mimic pelvic movement, and from the standard care group (Group 3), which receives no virtual walking therapy.

Locations (1)

Schweizer Paraplegiker Zentrum Nottwil

Nottwil, Canton of Lucerne, Switzerland