硬膜外电刺激促进涉及髓圆锥脊髓损伤的运动恢复:一个案例研究。

IF 11.8 Q1 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL
Med Pub Date : 2025-05-17 DOI:10.1016/j.medj.2025.100706
Luigi Albano, Daniele Emedoli, Filippo Agnesi, Simone Romeni, Elena Losanno, Laura Toni, Veronica Fossati, Chiara Ciucci, Filippo Gasperotti, Leonardo Cociani, Giovanni Zucco, Edoardo Pompeo, Cinzia Mura, Jacopo Carpaneto, Andrea Tettamanti, Veronica Castelnovo, Jeffrey David Padul, Carlo Mandelli, Lina Raffaella Barzaghi, Federica Alemanno, Heike Caravati, Carla Butera, Ubaldo Del Carro, Antonella Castellano, Andrea Falini, Federica Agosta, Massimo Filippi, Sandro Iannaccone, Pietro Mortini, Silvestro Micera
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:越来越多的新研究支持硬膜外脊髓电刺激(EES)联合神经康复可以改善脊髓损伤(SCI)受试者的运动恢复。可能由于潜在的周围神经系统损伤,涉及髓锥病变的患者可能难以用这种方法治疗,这就留下了一个悬而未决的问题,即这么大的人群是否可以从EES中受益。方法:在一项临床试验(NCT05926843)中,一名T11-T12期脊髓损伤患者接受了EES植入。在三个月的测试中,我们确定了改善孤立运动的最佳刺激方案,并将它们整合起来,以恢复与助行器的独立行走。结果:EES显著增强髋屈肌、脊柱竖立肌和腹肌收缩,改善患者在孤立运动中的表现。经过三个月的持续阈下EES和个性化康复治疗,患者从无法行走发展到使用两轮助行器和双侧膝关节和足部矫形器在地上行走。出院时,患者在6分钟步行测试中步行58米,在40秒29秒内完成10米步行测试。植入EES 6个月后,患者可以借助助行器独立行走1公里。结论:这些结果强调了神经康复方案整合EES的潜力,也为髓锥病变患者铺平了道路,为新的康复前景铺平了道路。资助:本工作由圣拉斐尔维塔致敬大学、波士顿科学水疗中心、Cariplo基金会、Bertarelli基金会和大学与研究部(MUR)资助。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Epidural electrical stimulation facilitates motor recovery in spinal cord injury involving the conus medullaris: A case study.

Background: Emerging research increasingly supports that epidural spinal cord electrical stimulation (EES) combined with neurorehabilitation can improve motor recovery in spinal cord injury (SCI) subjects. Patients with lesions involving the medullary cone may be challenging to treat with this approach, probably due to potential peripheral nervous system damage, leaving the open question of whether this large population may benefit from EES.

Methods: A T11-T12 SCI patient, with medullary cone involvement, underwent EES implant in a clinical trial (NCT05926843). During three months of testing, we determined optimal stimulation protocols for improving isolated movements and integrated them to reinstate independent walking with a walker.

Findings: EES substantially boosted hip flexor, spinal erector, and abdominal muscle contraction, improving the patient's performance in isolated movements. Over three months of combining continuous subthreshold EES with personalized rehabilitation, the patient progressed from being unable to walk to overground ambulation using a two-wheeled walker and bilateral knee and foot orthoses. At the time of hospital discharge, the patient managed to cover 58 m in the 6-min walking test and completed the 10-meter walking test in 40.29 s. Six months after EES implant, the patient was able to walk independently for 1 km with a walker.

Conclusions: These results underscore the potential of neurorehabilitation protocols integrating EES also for patients with medullary cone lesions and pave the way for new rehabilitation prospects.

Funding: This work was funded by Università Vita-Salute San Raffaele, Boston Scientific Spa, Fondazione Cariplo, Bertarelli Foundation, and the Ministry of University and Research (MUR).

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来源期刊
Med
Med MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL-
CiteScore
17.70
自引率
0.60%
发文量
102
期刊介绍: Med is a flagship medical journal published monthly by Cell Press, the global publisher of trusted and authoritative science journals including Cell, Cancer Cell, and Cell Reports Medicine. Our mission is to advance clinical research and practice by providing a communication forum for the publication of clinical trial results, innovative observations from longitudinal cohorts, and pioneering discoveries about disease mechanisms. The journal also encourages thought-leadership discussions among biomedical researchers, physicians, and other health scientists and stakeholders. Our goal is to improve health worldwide sustainably and ethically. Med publishes rigorously vetted original research and cutting-edge review and perspective articles on critical health issues globally and regionally. Our research section covers clinical case reports, first-in-human studies, large-scale clinical trials, population-based studies, as well as translational research work with the potential to change the course of medical research and improve clinical practice.
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