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Cervical Spinal Stimulation Restores Arm Strength in Small Stroke Trial

The pilot suggests boosting residual brain‑to‑spinal‑cord signals can produce instant, assistive gains that have led researchers to open a longer trial.

Overview

  • A University of Pittsburgh pilot published in Nature Medicine on Thursday found that seven chronic stroke survivors showed immediate improvement in arm movement when cervical epidural stimulation was turned on.
  • With stimulation active participants averaged a 32% increase in overall arm strength and showed gains in shoulder flexion (28%), elbow extension (35%) and grip (55%), plus mean Fugl‑Meyer Assessment improvements of about 5.6 to 6.6 points.
  • The study tested a safety‑focused protocol over four weeks with fewer than nine hours of movement training and reported no serious adverse events or intolerable discomfort.
  • Motor benefits faded when stimulation was stopped, indicating the approach currently acts as an assistive neuroprosthetic that amplifies remaining brain‑to‑spinal‑cord connections rather than a proven permanent cure.
  • Researchers have begun recruiting a larger, longer trial to study sustained use and combinations with physical therapy, and the method repurposes a class of epidural devices long used for chronic pain.