At a glance
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Motor and Neurophysiological Changes After Ischemic Conditioning in Individuals With Stroke
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Real Ischemic Conditioning and Sham Ischemic Conditioning for Stroke. Completed, enrolled 20 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
The goal of this clinical trial is to test ischemic conditioning (blood flow restriction) as a neuromodulatory technique to improve gait function in stroke. Neuromodulation is emerging as a promising adjunct strategy to facilitate changes in brain activity and improve motor behavior following a neurological injury such as stroke. The main questions this trial aims to answer are: * Can ischemic conditioning produce neuromodulatory changes in the lower limb primary motor cortex? * Can ischemic conditioning be used as a neuromodulatory technique to improve strength and motor control in individuals with stroke when compared to sham ischemic conditioning? Participants will take part in two sessions of ischemic conditioning where a cuff (similar to ones that measure blood pressure) will be placed around the thigh and inflated to one of two blood flow restriction pressures (real ischemic conditioning (real IC) and sham ischemic conditioning (sham IC)). Each participant will experience measures of brain activity and motor behavior testing before and after both sessions (real IC and sham IC). Researchers will investigate ischemic conditioning as neuromodulation modality in stroke to see if ischemic conditioning can produce beneficial changes in brain activity and improvements on subsequent motor behavior tasks.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
10-minute cycles of blood flow restriction (5 minutes) followed by blood flow release (5 minutes), repeated 5 times for a total of 50 minutes.
Sham ischemic conditioning will mirror ischemic conditioning procedures, differing solely in cuff pressure during blood flow restriction to replicate to replicate perceived tightness without arterial blood flow restriction.