Test of Discomfort and Malaise of Two Different Urine Catheters in Healthy Volunteers
Spinal Cord InjuryThe purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety of a new developed catheter in comparison with an catheter on the market. The study is randomised.
Pilot Study of Fosamax in Spinal Cord Injury
Spinal Cord InjuryOsteoporosisStudy is designed to evaluate the efficacy of oral fosamax in prevention on osteoporosis in acute spinal cord injury. Efficacy will be measured by a duel energy X-Ray absorptiometry (DEXA) scan every 6 months. Patients will complete 3 visits, screening, 6 months, 12 months and be required to take oral fosamax versus placebo weekly.
Spinal Cord Injury Energy Management Program
Spinal Cord InjuryFatigue is a common complaint of persons with spinal cord injury (SCI) that negatively affects physical function, participation in daily activities, employment, and community involvement. No behavioural intervention for fatigue has been reported for SCI, though the benefits of such programs have been proven in persons with neurological conditions like multiple sclerosis and arthritis. Based on a study with people with SCI, an energy management program (EnMP-1) was developed. The focus of this study is to test EnMP-1. Adults with SCI living in the community and reporting fatigue as a problem will participate in the program. Hypothesis: Participants in the EnMP-1 group will show significantly lower fatigue impact scores and higher self-efficacy scores immediately after, 3 months, and 6 months post-intervention than EnMP-2 participants.
Effects of Vaporized Marijuana on Neuropathic Pain
Neuropathic PainReflex Sympathetic Dystrophy4 moreThis study theorized that a low dose of vaporized cannabis could alleviate nerve injury pain.
Multifaceted Treatment of Catheter-related Urinary Tract Infection
Spinal Cord InjuryNeurogenic Bladder1 moreThe specific objective of this clinical trial is to demonstrate that a multifaceted approach for treatment for catheter-related urinary tract infection (UTI) in patients with spinal cord injury is effective and feasible. We plan to test the following hypothesis: a multifaceted treatment approach that consists of immediate removal of the indwelling bladder catheter, selecting antibiotics based on the finding from a urine culture that is obtained through the newly inserted catheter, and a 5-day course of systemic antibiotics will effectively treat catheter-related infection that is limited to the lower urinary tract of patients with spinal cord injury.
Effect of Tadalafil (Cialis) on the Cardiovascular System of Spinal Cord Injury (SCI) Males
HypotensionSpinal Cord InjuryTo address the effect of tadalafil (Cialis) on the cardiovascular system of men with complete spinal cord injury at T-6 and above. The hypothesis is that tadalafil will cause significant hypotension in people with tetraplegia.
A 17-Week Trial To Assess Pregabalin For The Treatment Of Nerve Pain Due To Spinal Cord Injury
NeuralgiaSpinal Cord InjuriesThe purpose of this study is to evaluate if pregabalin relieves nerve pain associated with spinal cord injury compared to placebo (pill that contains no active medicine). This study will also evaluate the safety of pregabalin in this patient population.
Acute Safety, Tolerability, Feasibility and Pharmacokinetics of Intrath. Administered ATI355 in...
Acute Spinal Cord InjuryThis study will evaluate the acute safety, tolerability, feasibility and pharmacokinetics of 6 dose regimens of ATI355 in acute spinal cord injury patients
Safety and Pharmacokinetics Study of Oral Lithium in Patients With Chronic Spinal Cord Injury
Spinal Cord InjuriesThe current study is a phase I open-label clinical trial to examine plasma levels after oral lithium treatments in 20 subjects with chronic spinal cord injury. The subjects will receive standard doses of oral lithium used in treatment of manic depression. The goal of the trial is to show feasibility and safety of maintaining plasma levels of 0.6 mmol/L to 1.2 mmol/L for six weeks in subjects with chronic spinal cord injury.
Acupuncture for Treatment of Acute Spinal Cord Injury: an Exploratory/Developmental Study
Spinal Cord InjurySpecific Aim: to implement and evaluate a research protocol for demonstrating the efficacy of Acupuncture Therapy to improve neurological recovery after incomplete SCI compared to a control protocol. Hypothesis: acupuncture treatment results in greater neurological recovery than a control treatment after an incomplete SCI. Before conducting a larger, more definitive study, this exploratory and developmental work is focused on assessing whether blinding is possible, reproducibility of the outcome measure, determine enrollment rates and effect sizes and identify clinical resources needed to conduct a larger study.