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Promising New Wearable Could Retrain the Brain After Stroke


 

A new and deceptively simple advance in chronic stroke treatment could be a vibrating glove.

Researchers at Stanford University and Georgia Tech have developed a wearable device that straps around the wrist and hand, delivering subtle vibrations (akin to a vibrating cellphone) that may relieve spasticity as well as or better than the standard Botox injections.

“The vibro-tactile stimulation can be used at home, and we’re hoping it can be relatively low cost,” said senior study author Allison Okamura, PhD, a mechanical engineer at Stanford University, Stanford, California.

For now, the device is available only to clinical trial patients. But the researchers hope to get the glove into — or rather onto — more patients’ hands within a few years. A recent grant from the National Science Foundation’s Convergence Accelerator program could help pave the way to a commercial product. The team also hopes to expand access in the meantime through larger clinical trials with patients in additional locations.

The work builds on accumulating research exploring vibration and other stimulation therapies as treatments for neurological conditions. Other vibrating gloves have helped reduce involuntary movement for patients with Parkinson’s. And the University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, will soon trial the Food and Drug Administration–approved vagal nerve stimulator, an implantable device intended to treat motor function in stroke survivors. Dr. Okamura noted that devices use “different types of vibration patterns and intensities,” depending on the disease state they target.

Spasticity often develops or worsens months after a stroke. By then, patients may have run out of insurance coverage for rehabilitation. And the effectiveness of Botox injections can “wear out over time,” Dr. Okamura said.

In a clinical trial, patients wore the device for 3 hours a day for 8 weeks, while doing their usual activities. The researchers continued testing their spasticity for 2 more weeks. Symptom relief continued or improved for some patients, even after they stopped using the device. More than half of the participants experienced equal or better results than another group that received only regular Botox injections.

How Vibro-Tactile Stimulation May Rewire the Brain

The device originated at Georgia Tech, where Dr. Okamura’s postdoctoral research fellow Caitlyn Seim, PhD, was using vibro-tactile stimulation (VTS) to teach people skills, such as playing the piano, using touch-feedback training. The team decided to target spasticity, which VTS had helped in previousstudies of in-clinic (non-wearable) devices.

How does the device work? The researchers point to neuroplasticity, the ability of neurons to create new synapses or strengthen existing ones in the brain.

“The stimulation is sending additional sensory signals to the brain, which helps the brain interpret and reconnect any lost circuits,” Dr. Okamura said.

Spasticity is driven by “an imbalance in the excitatory drive to the muscles,” she continued. This can lead to worsening contractions, until a hand closes into a fist or a foot curls up. (The team has also done preliminary research on a similar device for foot spasticity, which they hope to continue developing.) Previous studies by Okamura and others suggest that vibration stimulation may prevent these contractions, both in the short and long term.

“Immediately, we do see some softening of the muscles,” Dr. Okamura said. “But in our longer-term study, where we compared to Botox, I also think that the vibration may be retraining the brain to send inhibitory signals. And that can restore balance that’s lost due to the damaged neural circuits from a stroke.”

When the team did a separate study comparing the effects of muscle and skin stimulation, they hypothesized that the vibration could be having a biomechanical effect on the muscle. Instead, they found that stimulating the skin had a greater impact — a “somewhat unexpected” result, Dr. Okamura said. That led them to the brain.

“Stimulating the skin is really about creating sensory signals that get sent to the brain,” Dr. Okamura said, “which is why we think it’s actually a brain-retraining effect and not a direct biomechanical effect.”

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