作者
Andreas Rowald,Salif Komi,Robin Demesmaeker,Edeny Baaklini,Sergio Daniel Hernandez-Charpak,Edoardo Paoles,Hazael Montanaro,Antonino M. Cassarà,Fabio Becce,Bryn Lloyd,Taylor Newton,Jimmy Ravier,Nawal Kinany,Marina D’Ercole,Aurélie Paley,Nicolas Hankov,Camille Varescon,Laura McCracken,Molywan Vat,Miroslav Caban,Anne Watrin,Charlotte Jacquet,Léa Bole-Feysot,Cathal Harte,Henri Lorach,Andrea Gálvez,Manon Tschopp,Natacha Herrmann,Moïra Wacker,Lionel Geernaert,Isabelle Fodor,Valentin Radevich,Katrien Van Den Keybus,Grégoire Eberle,Étienne Pralong,Maxime Roulet,Jean‐Baptiste Ledoux,Eleonora Fornari,Stefano Mandija,Loan Mattera,Roberto Martuzzi,Bruno Nazarian,Stefan Benkler,Simone Callegari,Nathan Greiner,Benjamin Fuhrer,Martijn Froeling,Nicholas Buse,Timothy Denison,Rik Buschman,Christian Wende,Damien Ganty,Jurriaan Bakker,Vincent Delattre,Hendrik Lambert,Karen Minassian,Cornelis A. T. van den Berg,Anne Kavounoudias,Silvestro Micera,Dimitri Van De Ville,Quentin Barraud,Erkan Kurt,Niels Kuster,Esra Neufeld,Marco Capogrosso,Léonie Asboth,Fabien B. Wagner,Jocelyne Bloch,Grégoire Courtine
摘要
Epidural electrical stimulation (EES) targeting the dorsal roots of lumbosacral segments restores walking in people with spinal cord injury (SCI). However, EES is delivered with multielectrode paddle leads that were originally designed to target the dorsal column of the spinal cord. Here, we hypothesized that an arrangement of electrodes targeting the ensemble of dorsal roots involved in leg and trunk movements would result in superior efficacy, restoring more diverse motor activities after the most severe SCI. To test this hypothesis, we established a computational framework that informed the optimal arrangement of electrodes on a new paddle lead and guided its neurosurgical positioning. We also developed software supporting the rapid configuration of activity-specific stimulation programs that reproduced the natural activation of motor neurons underlying each activity. We tested these neurotechnologies in three individuals with complete sensorimotor paralysis as part of an ongoing clinical trial ( www.clinicaltrials.gov identifier NCT02936453). Within a single day, activity-specific stimulation programs enabled these three individuals to stand, walk, cycle, swim and control trunk movements. Neurorehabilitation mediated sufficient improvement to restore these activities in community settings, opening a realistic path to support everyday mobility with EES in people with SCI.