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Study details
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Non-invasive Electrical Spinal Cord Stimulation To Restore Upper Extremity Function in Multiple Sclerosis

University of Washington
NCT IDNCT06552611ClinicalTrials.gov data as of Apr 2026
Phase

Phase 1

Target enrollment

4

Study length

about 11 months

Ages

21–70

Locations

1 site in WA

About this study

This trial is testing a treatment that combines electrical spinal cord stimulation with occupational therapy to help people with multiple sclerosis improve their upper extremity function. Participants will receive either the combined treatment or occupational therapy alone for six weeks, separated by a washout period. The goal of this pilot trial is to determine if this approach is feasible and safe, as well as whether it leads to improvements in upper extremity function and quality of life compared to occupational therapy alone.

Based on ClinicalTrials.gov records.

What participants do

  • 1.Participate in Occupational Therapy
  • 2.Participate in Transcutaneous electrical spinal cord stimulation + therapy
PhasePhase 1

Participation effort

Estimated from trial records. Details can vary by site.

Time + visits
Low12%
Logistics
Moderate50%

Logistics difficulty varies by site location and availability.

Trial highlights

Treatment details

Auto-extracted from trial records to preview treatments and outcomes.

Endpoints

Secondary: Global Impression of Change, Modified Fatigue Impact Scale, PROMIS Pain Intensity, PROMIS Pain Interference

Body systems

Neurology