This study uses Magnetic Resonance Imaging to image the brain and spinal cord before and after an Intermittent Hypoxia intervention. Acquiring these scans in patients with chronic cervical spinal cord injury and uninjured controls will enable characterization of changes in neurovascular physiology caused by this promising new therapy.
Acute intermittent hypoxia (AIH) is an emerging, safe technique for facilitating neural plasticity in individuals with chronic spinal cord injury (SCI), demonstrating significant transient improvements in respiratory function, plantar flexion, locomotor function, and hand dexterity and strength. Although these studies observe some degree of success eliciting plasticity, we lack a framework for systematic optimization of the AIH protocol for individual patients. Better understanding of what physiological mechanisms drive AIH-induced neural plasticity in humans will directly inform the development of AIH as an effective treatment option in chronic SCI. This study applies magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to test how AIH influences vascular and neural properties of the brain and spinal cord. Individuals with SCI and uninjured participants will be recruited to undergo two MRI scan sessions on one day. In between these scan sessions, participants will undergo a single 30-minute session of AIH. In each scan session, functional MRI will assess AIH-induced changes in neural activation patterns during motor tasks (unilateral isometric hand grasping tasks) and vascular reactivity to breath hold tasks (transient hypocapnia to induce vasodilation). Additional structural scans will be acquired to aid in image analysis.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
43
Participants will wear a non-rebreathing face mask and alternate between breathing 9% O2 gas mixture for up to 1 minute, or until the target SpO2 of 85 percent is reached, and normal room air (21 percent O2) until 2 minutes are complete. This cycle will be repeated 15 times, resulting in a 30-minute protocol.
Northwestern University
Chicago, Illinois, United States
BOLD fMRI activation in motor cortex during isometric hand grip tasks
Assess AIH-induced changes in %BOLD activation within the left and right motor cortices during unilateral isometric hand grasping tasks targeting submaximal force levels with real-time feedback.
Time frame: Immediately before and ~ 1-hour after AIH on the same day
BOLD fMRI vascular reactivity to a breath-hold task
Measurements of breath-hold induced vasodilation (vascular reactivity, in units of %BOLD/mmHg end-tidal CO2) acquired via functional MRI in the brain and spinal cord.
Time frame: Immediately before and ~ 1-hour after AIH on the same day
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.