RecruitingEarly Phase 1NCT06274021
Neuromodulation to Reduce Muscle Stiffness Following Spinal Cord Injury
Studying Spinal cord injury
Last synced from ClinicalTrials.gov
ℹ
Clinical trial records are synced from ClinicalTrials.gov through automated extraction.
Report missing dataKey facts
- Sponsor
- University of Mississippi Medical Center
- Principal Investigator
- Matthias J Krenn, Ph.D.University of Mississippi Medical Center
- Intervention
- Transcutaneous spinal stimulation at 100 Hz(device)
- Enrollment
- 16 target
- Eligibility
- 18 years · All sexes
- Timeline
- 2024 – 2025
Study locations (2)
- Methodist Rehabilitation Center, Jackson, Mississippi, United States
- University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, Mississippi, United States
Collaborators
Methodist Rehabilitation Center · The Craig H. Neilsen Foundation
Primary source
Recruitment status, site addresses, contacts, and full eligibility criteria can change between syncs. Always verify with the trial team before planning travel or treatment.
Open NCT06274021 on ClinicalTrials.govOther trials for Spinal cord injury
Additional recruiting or active studies for the same condition.
- RECRUITINGPHASE1, PHASE2NCT06410001CE-STAND: Cervical Epidural STimulation After Neurologic DamageUniversity of Minnesota
- RECRUITINGNANCT07204184Multisite Transspinal Stimulation for Augmenting Recovery in Spinal Cord InjuryMaria Knikou, PT, MBA, PhD
- RECRUITINGNANCT06924177UTSW NORC Pilot Spinal Cord Injury Dietary ProgramUniversity of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
- RECRUITINGNANCT06867809Spine and Brain Stimulation for Movement Recovery After Cervical Spinal Cord InjuryJason Carmel
- ENROLLING BY INVITATIONNANCT06873776Arm and Leg Cycling for Accelerated SCI RecoveryShirley Ryan AbilityLab
- RECRUITINGNANCT07135583Non-Invasive Interventions for Respiratory Recovery in Chronic Spinal Cord InjuryThomas Jefferson University
- RECRUITINGNANCT07222033Self-balancing Personal Exoskeleton for SCI (WINY)Wandercraft
- RECRUITINGPHASE1, PHASE2NCT06677229Phase 1b/2a Clinical Trial to Determine the Safety, Tolerability and Efficacy of TZ-161 in Spinal Cord InjuryTechnophage, SA