| Literature DB >> 32714270 |
Lynsey D Duffell1,2, Nicholas de Neufvillle Donaldson1.
Abstract
There is increasing evidence that neuroplastic changes can occur even years after spinal cord injury, leading to reduced disability and better health which should reduce the cost of healthcare. In motor-incomplete spinal cord injury, recovery of leg function may occur if repetitive training causes afferent input to the lumbar spinal cord. The afferent input may be due to activity-based therapy without electrical stimulation but we present evidence that it is faster with electrical stimulation. This may be spinal cord stimulation or peripheral nerve stimulation. Recovery is faster if the stimulation is phasic and that the patient is trying to use their legs during the training. All the published studies are small, so all conclusions are provisional, but it appears that patients with more disability (AIS A and B) may need to continue using stimulation and for them, an implanted stimulator is likely to be convenient. Patients with less disability (AIS C and D) may make useful recovery and improve their quality of life from a course of therapy. This might be locomotion therapy but we argue that cycling with electrical stimulation, which uses biofeedback to encourage descending drive, causes rapid recovery and might be used with little supervision at home, making it much less expensive. Such an electrical therapy followed by conventional physiotherapy might be affordable for the many people living with chronic SCI. To put this in perspective, we present some information about what treatments are funded in the UK and the US.Entities:
Keywords: FES; FES-cycling; SCS; locomotor training; neuroplasticity; neuroprosthesis; posterior nerve roots; spinal cord injury
Year: 2020 PMID: 32714270 PMCID: PMC7344227 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2020.00607
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Terms used in this field are often inexact, imprecise or even misleading. In this review, we are using the customary terms but offer this table in explanation.
| FES (Functional Electrical Stimulation) | |
| SCS (Spinal Cord Stimulation) | Stimulation, primarily of the posterior (sensory) nerve roots. |
| Epidural SCS | Stimulation using an electrode array facing the dura in the posterior spinal canal. |
| Transcutaneous SCS | Stimulation using one or more electrodes on the skin in the lumbar region. The current can stimulate the posterior roots but also, to some extent, the cutaneous afferents and the trunk muscles. |
| Neuromodulation | May be by chemical or electrical methods. Tonic electrical stimulation is usually applied by an Implanted Pulse Generator (IPG). An example is Deep Brain Stimulation. |
| Neuroprosthesis | Used to describe devices that have a more complicated interaction with the nervous system than neuromodulators, stimulation being applied conditionally, following some physiological input, or closed-loop. Examples are foot-drop stimulators (see text) or demand cardiac pacemakers. |
Figure 1Comparison of the rate of change of ISNCSCI motor score for six therapies from Table 2. These have n > 1 and non-negligible improvement in motor score. We excluded Sadowsky et al. (60) because of the very wide range of training in that study. LT without electrical stimulation (34), FES-Cycling (62), FES-Cycling with virtual reality and biofeedback (61), SCS Neuroprosthesis (63), FES Neuroprosthesis (35) and SCS with drug and zero-gravity training (64). EOT, End of Therapy; FU, Follow-Up.
Treatment of SCI patients with chronic injuries by electrical stimulation: change in ISNCSCI Motor Score.
| Possover ( | 4 | Complete/incomplete (B/C) | FES | Implant | Phasic | Walking | 12 | 3–5 | 156–260 | 12.8 (1–21) |
| McDonald et al. ( | 1 | Complete (A) | FES | Surface | Phasic | Cycling | 36 | 7 | 1,092 | 20 |
| Wagner et al. ( | 3 | Incomplete (C/D) | SCS | Implant | Phasic | Walking + cycling | 5 | 5 | 108 | 10.3 (4–16) |
| Sadowsky et al. ( | 25 | Complete/incomplete (A/B/C) | FES | Surface | Phasic | Cycling | 29.5 (Range 3–168) | 3 | 360 (Range 36–2016) | 8.1 (NR) |
| Gerasimenko et al. ( | 5 | Complete (B) | SCS + drug | Surface | Tonic | Walking (zero-gravity) | 4 | 1 | 16 | 7 (NR) |
| Yaşar et al. ( | 10 | Incomplete (C/D) | FES | Surface | Phasic | Cycling | 3 | 3 | 36 | 4.7 (NR) |
| Duffell et al. ( | 6 | Incomplete (C/D) | FES | Surface | Phasic | Cycling | 1 | 3 | 12 | 4.7 (0–13) |
| Angeli et al. ( | 4 | Complete (A/B) | SCS | Implant | Tonic | Walking | Range 6–20 | 7 | 168–560 | 0.25 (0–1) |
| Carhart et al. ( | 1 | Incomplete (C) | SCS | Implant | Tonic | Walking | 7 | 5 | 140 | 0 |
| Grahn et al. ( | 1 | Complete (A) | SCS | Implant | Tonic | Walking | 0.5 | 4 | 8 | 0 |
Possover applied continuous low-frequency pelvic nerve stimulation between the training phases.
McDonald supplemented FES cycling with continuous stimulation of trunk muscles.
Improvement in ISNCSCI motor score taken from follow-up data, as opposed to end of training data.
NR, Not Reported.
A summary of the advantages and disadvantages of Functional Electrical Stimulation (FES) and Spinal Cord Stimulation (SCS) and the available methods.