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NCT03411863COMPLETEDanonymous

Noninvasive Cervical Electrical Stimulation for ALS: Mechanistic and Safety Study

Sponsor

Source record

VA Office of Research and Development

Phase

Source record

NA

Modality

AI-normalized

combination therapy

Target

AI-normalized

CES at rest, CES plus active hand or wrist movements

Indication / condition

AI-normalized

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

Intervention

Source record

CES at rest, CES plus active hand or wrist movements

Source & freshness

Source record

NCT ID

NCT03411863

Original source

ClinicalTrials.gov

Source last updated

Oct 25, 2022

Ingested at

Jun 18, 2026

Internal sync

Jun 18, 2026

Model version

trialsignal-ai-v1

Normalized confidence

96%

Validation status

validated

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View original source fields

NCT ID

NCT03411863

Title

Noninvasive Cervical Electrical Stimulation for ALS: Mechanistic and Safety Study

Sponsor

VA Office of Research and Development

Status

COMPLETED

Phase

NA

Condition raw

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

Condition normalized

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

Modality raw

combination therapy

Modality normalized

combination therapy

Target raw

CES at rest, CES plus active hand or wrist movements

Target normalized

CES at rest, CES plus active hand or wrist movements

Interventions

CES at rest, CES plus active hand or wrist movements

Public preview

Source record

Veterans are at higher risk than non-Veterans of falling ill with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). ALS causes degeneration of motor neurons in both the brain and the spinal cord. Evidence from studies in people with spinal cord injury suggests that activating spared nerve circuits with electromagnetic stimulation improves nerve transmission.

With this goal, the investigators have developed a novel method of noninvasive cervical (neck) electrical stimulation (CES). In this study, the investigators will investigate CES for its potential to strengthen nerve circuits to the hands in ALS.

To the investigators' knowledge, electrical spinal stimulation for ALS has never been tested previously. This study will be performed in two stages: First, basic experiments will be performed to better understand how CES interacts with other types of electrical and magnetic stimulations over the brain and peripheral nerves. Second, experiments will be performed to determine the types of CES that can facilitate active arm and hand movements.

These experiments will improve understanding of electrical stimulation in ALS, and may set the table for future treatments.

Both United States Veterans and non-Veterans are eligible to participate in this study.

AI-generated analysis supports research triage only. Verify source records, publications, sponsor disclosures and IP databases before making diligence decisions. Model: trialsignal-ai-v1.

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