Ensayos clínicos A continuación se enumeran ensayos clínicos actuales.10 estudios en Programa de Rehabilitación para Lesiones de la Médula Espinal (estudios abiertos únicamente). Filtrar esta lista de estudios según la ubicación, el estado del estudio y más. Spinal Cord Injury Physical Activity Guidelines in Association with Health-Related and Psychosocial Outcomes Rochester, Minn. The purpose of this study is to determine whether meeting the physical activity guidelines for cardiometabolic health is associated with positive health-related outcomes. Additionally to determine whether meeting the physical activity guidelines for cardiometabolic health is associated with positive psychosocial outcomes, and determine whether meeting the physical activity guidelines for cardiometabolic health is associated with greater social and occupational integration. A Study to Survey Epidural User Experience for Individuals with Spinal Cord Injury Paralysis Rochester, Minn. This is a survey study to identify user-reported motor, sensory, and autonomic functions that are enabled by epidural stimulation, establish correlations between epidural stimulation usage, rehabilitation, functional gains, and user experience in the laboratory and community settings, and to understand and identify subjective goals, benefits, and barriers that still exist with implanted epidural stimulator community. Preserved Autonomic Function Following Spinal Cord Injury Rochester, Minn. The purpose of this study is to characterize gradients of dysfunction in the autonomic nervous system after spinal cord injury. Spinal Cord Injury Model Systems For Minnesota Region (SCIMS) Rochester, Minn. The purpose of this study is to contribute to the Spinal Cord Injury Model Systems (SCIMS) national database through longitudinal assessment of long-term health and psychosocial outcomes after acquired spinal cord injury (SCI). Analysis of Spinal Cord Stimulation Usage Over a 15-Year Period Scottsdale/Phoenix, Ariz., Rochester, Minn. The purpose of this study is to determine the rate at which patients who underwent Spinal Cord Stimulation (SCS) trial ultimately progressed to SCS implantation, determine the percentage of patients who continued using their SCS system after 5 years, as well as identify patient characteristics that lead to SCS discontinuation. A Study to Evaluate Neurostimulation to Treat Chronic Upper Limb Pain After Brachial Plexus Injury Rochester, Minn., Jacksonville, Fla. This study is designed to assess the degree to which high-frequency spinal cord stimulation may help with pain after brachial plexus avulsion injury. Cutaneous Autonomic Innervation in Skin Pressure Injury Pathophysiology After Spinal Cord Injury Rochester, Minn. The overall goal of this research is to investigate potential differences in the regulation of skin blood flow in individuals with spinal cord injury. A Study Of Secondary Medical Complications Related To Spinal Cord Injury Rochester, Minn. The purpose of this study is to track the chronological history in autonomic recovery over the first 12 months following acute SCI. Mayo Clinic Spinal Cord Injury (SCI) Rehabilitation Research Registry Rochester, Minn. This will be a prospective registry conducted and maintained at Mayo Clinic Rochester from which collaborating sites within Mayo, Mayo Health Systems, and other spinal cord injury centers can draw from in order to fulfill research enrollment. The information collected for this registry will be used for recruitment purposes only, and will not be used as research data. Participants who are recruited to participate in other research studies will need to complete a separate consenting/enrollment process specific to that study. Minnesota Spinal Cord Injury Data Network Rochester, Minn. This is a study to generate feasibilty data regarding the collection of health and psychosocial outcomes after acquired spinal cord injury (SCI) A continuación se enumeran ensayos clínicos actuales.10 estudios en Programa de Rehabilitación para Lesiones de la Médula Espinal (estudios abiertos únicamente). Filtrar esta lista de estudios según la ubicación, el estado del estudio y más. Spinal Cord Injury Physical Activity Guidelines in Association with Health-Related and Psychosocial Outcomes Rochester, Minn. The purpose of this study is to determine whether meeting the physical activity guidelines for cardiometabolic health is associated with positive health-related outcomes. Additionally to determine whether meeting the physical activity guidelines for cardiometabolic health is associated with positive psychosocial outcomes, and determine whether meeting the physical activity guidelines for cardiometabolic health is associated with greater social and occupational integration. A Study to Survey Epidural User Experience for Individuals with Spinal Cord Injury Paralysis Rochester, Minn. This is a survey study to identify user-reported motor, sensory, and autonomic functions that are enabled by epidural stimulation, establish correlations between epidural stimulation usage, rehabilitation, functional gains, and user experience in the laboratory and community settings, and to understand and identify subjective goals, benefits, and barriers that still exist with implanted epidural stimulator community. Spinal Cord Injury Model Systems For Minnesota Region (SCIMS) Rochester, Minn. The purpose of this study is to contribute to the Spinal Cord Injury Model Systems (SCIMS) national database through longitudinal assessment of long-term health and psychosocial outcomes after acquired spinal cord injury (SCI). Preserved Autonomic Function Following Spinal Cord Injury Rochester, Minn. The purpose of this study is to characterize gradients of dysfunction in the autonomic nervous system after spinal cord injury. Analysis of Spinal Cord Stimulation Usage Over a 15-Year Period Scottsdale/Phoenix, Ariz., Rochester, Minn. The purpose of this study is to determine the rate at which patients who underwent Spinal Cord Stimulation (SCS) trial ultimately progressed to SCS implantation, determine the percentage of patients who continued using their SCS system after 5 years, as well as identify patient characteristics that lead to SCS discontinuation. A Study to Evaluate Neurostimulation to Treat Chronic Upper Limb Pain After Brachial Plexus Injury Rochester, Minn., Jacksonville, Fla. This study is designed to assess the degree to which high-frequency spinal cord stimulation may help with pain after brachial plexus avulsion injury. Cutaneous Autonomic Innervation in Skin Pressure Injury Pathophysiology After Spinal Cord Injury Rochester, Minn. The overall goal of this research is to investigate potential differences in the regulation of skin blood flow in individuals with spinal cord injury. A Study Of Secondary Medical Complications Related To Spinal Cord Injury Rochester, Minn. The purpose of this study is to track the chronological history in autonomic recovery over the first 12 months following acute SCI. Mayo Clinic Spinal Cord Injury (SCI) Rehabilitation Research Registry Rochester, Minn. This will be a prospective registry conducted and maintained at Mayo Clinic Rochester from which collaborating sites within Mayo, Mayo Health Systems, and other spinal cord injury centers can draw from in order to fulfill research enrollment. The information collected for this registry will be used for recruitment purposes only, and will not be used as research data. Participants who are recruited to participate in other research studies will need to complete a separate consenting/enrollment process specific to that study. Minnesota Spinal Cord Injury Data Network Rochester, Minn. This is a study to generate feasibilty data regarding the collection of health and psychosocial outcomes after acquired spinal cord injury (SCI) MédicosInvestigación Feb. 05, 2026 Comparte en: FacebookTwitter Programa de Rehabilitación para Lesiones de la Médula EspinalSeccionesPanorama generalAnálisis y procedimientosEnfermedades tratadasMédicosEnsayos clínicosInvestigaciónCostos y seguroNoticias de Mayo ClinicRemisionesUnidad de Rehabilitaciónpara Pacientes InternadosPrograma de Atención Médica Ambulatoria para Pacientescon Lesiones de la Médula EspinalClínica de Servicios de Sillasde Ruedas y Asientos Investigación: los pacientes son la prioridad Mostrar la transcripción Para video Investigación: los pacientes son la prioridad [SUENA MÚSICA] Dr. Joseph Sirven, profesor de Neurología, Mayo Clinic: La misión de Mayo se centra en el paciente. La prioridad es el paciente. Aquí, la misión y la investigación se hacen para progresar en la forma de ayudar mejor al paciente y para asegurarnos de que el paciente sea la prioridad en la atención médica. De muchas maneras, esto equivale a un ciclo. Puede comenzar con algo tan simple como una idea que se desarrolla en un laboratorio, se traslada a la atención directa del paciente y, si todo sale bien y resulta útil o beneficioso, pasa a ser el método estándar. Creo que una de las características tan singulares de la forma de investigar en Mayo es la concentración en el paciente, y es lo que realmente le ayuda a captar la atención de todos. SeccionesAnálisis y procedimientosEnfermedades tratadasMédicosEnsayos clínicosInvestigaciónRemisiones ORG-20480637 Centros y departamentos médicos Programa de Rehabilitación para Lesiones de la Médula Espinal