A Closed-loop Brain-computer Interface for Stroke

  • STATUS
    Recruiting
  • participants needed
    70
  • sponsor
    Taipei Veterans General Hospital, Taiwan
Updated on 19 February 2024
infarct

Summary

It may be hard to acquire stable sensorimotor rhythm from the affected motor cortex for patient without a response of paretic hand. A few studies suggest two ways to approaching closed-loop therapy: peripherally extracting the residual signals, for example electromyogram (EMG) at proximal muscles (deltoids) and centrally extracting the activity patterns from unaffected hemisphere during attempting to move paretic hand. Therefore, understanding neural signatures of residual upper extremity movement among stroke patients might help in discovering potential therapeutic target and developing tailored brain-computer interface (BCI) therapy. Additionally, 59.4% of stroke patients in acute stage impair at least one somatosensory modality. It remains unclear whether the patient with somatosensory impairment hinder BCI effect.

Description

Investigators will consecutively enroll subacute (1-4 weeks after stroke onset) patients with first-time, unilateral, subcortical stroke and age-matched healthy controls. All participants will carry on 2 sequential experiments. In the first experiment, participants will perform 2 motor tasks using either paretic/nondominant upper extremity or non-paretic/dominant upper extremity, called motor attempt (M) condition or calibration condition. The second experiment contains 3 conditions: cyclic functional electrical stimulation (cFES), cFES during motor attempt (M-cFES), and functional electrical stimulation during brain-computer interface (BCI-FES) in random order. The sensorimotor oscillations from the electroencephalography (EEG), upper extremity sensorimotor function score (Fugl-Meyer test, Action Research Arm test, and Revised Nottingham Sensation Assessment), corticospinal excitability from the transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), and resting-state functional and structural neuroimage from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) will be assessed before and after the final experiment, as well as 3 months after stroke.

Details
Condition Cerebrovascular accident
Age 20years - 80years
Clinical Study IdentifierNCT04465786
SponsorTaipei Veterans General Hospital, Taiwan
Last Modified on19 February 2024

Eligibility

Yes No Not Sure

Inclusion Criteria

first-ever, unilateral infarction or hemorrhage at middle cerebral artery or posterior cerebral artery territory
early subacute phase of stroke (between 1 and 4 weeks after stroke onset)

Exclusion Criteria

electroencephagraphy feature is not usable
Fugl-Meyer Assessment of Upper Extremity score is over 50
ataxia
global aphasia
concomitant neurological diseases
psychiatric diseases
participating in other interventional research during this period
other conditions might interfere with experiment
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