There are currently 121 active clinical trials seeking participants for Spinal Cord Injuries research studies. The states with the highest number of trials for Spinal Cord Injuries participants are Texas, New York, Florida and Illinois.
Ketogenic Diet to Improve Neuro-recovery
Recruiting
The purpose of this project is to determine if 5 weeks of ketogenic (KD, high-fat) diet vs. standard diet (SD) significantly improves motor and sensory function, glycemic function, and functional independence in patients with spinal cord injury.
Gender:
ALL
Ages:
Between 19 years and 60 years
Trial Updated:
07/24/2025
Locations: Ohio State University Hospital, Columbus, Ohio
Conditions: Spinal Cord Injuries
Diet and Exercise Solutions to Postprandial Hypotension
Recruiting
The purpose of this study is to determine if a low glycemic diet and lower-body electrical stimulation can reduce postprandial hypotension in individuals with chronic spinal cord injury.
Gender:
ALL
Ages:
Between 18 years and 65 years
Trial Updated:
07/24/2025
Locations: Dodd Rehabilitation Hospital, Columbus, Ohio
Conditions: Spinal Cord Injuries
Eccentric Muscle Training, Stimulation, and Biomarkers in SCI
Recruiting
The investigators are studying a new rehabilitation treatment for individuals trying to recover walking after spinal cord injury (SCI). The investigators will test conditions in the blood and spinal fluid to determine the best time to start this new training program. This will include checking for certain features called biomarkers by testing participants' spinal fluid and blood and compare these features to individuals without SCI. These features will help investigators determine when to start... Read More
Gender:
ALL
Ages:
Between 18 years and 85 years
Trial Updated:
10/24/2024
Locations: The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio +1 locations
Conditions: Spinal Cord Injuries, Healthy
Feasibility of Early Gabapentin as an Intervention for Neurorecovery
Recruiting
The objective of the proposed study is to conduct the first ever prospective, dose-exploration trial to test the feasibility of early administration of gabapentin as an intervention for neurorecovery. This research project falls under the Intervention Development stage of research as the primary goal is to assess the feasibility of conducting a well-designed intervention efficacy study in the future.
Gender:
ALL
Ages:
18 years and above
Trial Updated:
08/11/2025
Locations: MetroHealth Medical Center, Cleveland, Ohio
Conditions: Spinal Cord Injuries
Evaluation of an Advanced Lower Extremity Neuroprostheses
Recruiting
The purpose of this study is to evaluate a surgically implanted functional electrical stimulation (FES) system to facilitate exercise, standing, stepping and/or balance in people with various degrees of paralysis.
Gender:
ALL
Ages:
Between 21 years and 75 years
Trial Updated:
06/12/2025
Locations: Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center, Cleveland, Ohio +1 locations
Conditions: Spinal Cord Injuries, Stroke, Paralysis, Tetraplegia, Paraplegia
Multi-functional Neuroprosthetic System for Restoration of Motor Function in Spinal Cord Injury
Recruiting
This study is to evaluate the use of a fully implanted device for providing hand function, reach, and trunk function to individuals with cervical spinal cord injury. Funding Sources: FDA OOPD NIH NINDS
Gender:
ALL
Ages:
17 years and above
Trial Updated:
02/27/2025
Locations: MetroHealth Medical Center, Cleveland, Ohio
Conditions: Spinal Cord Injuries, Spinal Cord Injury at C5-C7 Level, Spinal Cord Injury Cervical, Spinal Cord Injury at C5-C7 Level With Complete Lesion, Spinal Cord Injury at C5-C7 Level With Incomplete Lesion
Grasp-Release Assessment of a Networked Neuroprosthesis Device
Recruiting
The overall objective of this trial is to characterize the safety and effectiveness of the Networked Neuroprosthesis Device - Upper Extremity (NP-UE) in individuals living with cervical SCI.
Gender:
ALL
Ages:
16 years and above
Trial Updated:
08/23/2024
Locations: MetroHealth Medical Center, Cleveland, Ohio
Conditions: Spinal Cord Injury at C5-C7 Level, Spinal Cord Injuries, Spinal Cord Injury Cervical
Locomotor and Bladder Function in Individuals With Acute Spinal Cord Injury
Recruiting
The loss of movement and walking ability significantly affects quality of life after spinal cord injury. In addition, bladder dysfunction consistently ranks as one of the top disorders affecting quality of life after spinal cord injury. The overall objective of this study is to demonstrate that epidural stimulation may be a method for improving stepping, standing and bladder function in individuals with spinal cord injury. With the use of epidural stimulation, the investigators propose to invest... Read More
Gender:
ALL
Ages:
Between 18 years and 65 years
Trial Updated:
08/12/2025
Locations: Kessler Foundation - Center for Spinal Stimulation, West Orange, New Jersey
Conditions: Spinal Cord Injuries
AIM's Writing for Healing: A Workshop for Individuals Living With Paralysis
Recruiting
The UAB Institute for Arts In Medicine (AIM) is currently implementing an expressive emotional writing pilot project for adults with paralysis caused by neurological conditions such as traumatic head or spinal cord injury.
Gender:
ALL
Ages:
18 years and above
Trial Updated:
08/04/2025
Locations: 354 School of Health Professions Building, Birmingham, Alabama
Conditions: Spinal Cord Injuries, Multiple Sclerosis, Transverse Myelitis, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
Transcutaneous Spinal Stimulation and Exercise for Locomotion
Recruiting
Growing evidence indicates that electrical spinal cord stimulation improves motor functions both immediately and over the long term via modulating the excitability of spinal circuitry in patients with spinal cord injury. Recently, a novel, non-invasive, well-tolerated, and painless lumbosacral transcutaneous electrical stimulation strategy was demonstrated to be effective in improving lower limb motor function in participants with spinal cord injury. Our current project, cervical transcutaneous... Read More
Gender:
ALL
Ages:
Between 21 years and 70 years
Trial Updated:
07/31/2025
Locations: University of Washington, Seattle, Washington
Conditions: Spinal Cord Injuries
Effectiveness of the Collaborative Community Clinic for Persons With Spinal Cord Injury and Disease
Recruiting
The investigator is evaluating data stored on the Collaborative Community Clinic data repository (IRB #201811032). Researchers seek to evaluate the effectiveness of the Collaborative Community Clinic (CCC), an occupational therapy student experiential learning clinic for uninsured or under-insured people with spinal cord injury and disease (SCI/D), using participants' initial and follow-up assessment batteries.
Gender:
ALL
Ages:
18 years and above
Trial Updated:
07/18/2025
Locations: Washington University, Saint Louis, Missouri
Conditions: Spinal Cord Injuries
Dose Escalation Study of EG110A, Administered by Intradetrusor Injections to Adults With Neurogenic Detrusor Overactivity-related Incontinence Following Spinal Cord Injury Who Regularly Perform Clean Intermittent Catheterization
Recruiting
This is a first-in-human, Phase 1b/2a, open-label, dose-escalation study of a single treatment course consisting of multiple intradetrusor injections of EG110A in male and female adult participants with Neurogenic Detrusor Overactivity (NDO)-related incontinence following Spinal Cord Injury (SCI), who have persistent incontinence after standard of care therapy and who perform Clear Intermittent Catheterization (CIC) on a regular basis.
Gender:
ALL
Ages:
Between 18 years and 75 years
Trial Updated:
07/15/2025
Locations: Rancho Los Amigos National Rehabilitation Center, Downey, California +3 locations
Conditions: Neurogenic Detrusor Overactivity, Spinal Cord Injuries