sTMS Combined With CIMT and taVNS In Infants With Hemiplegia

Participation Deadline: 12/31/2026
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Description

One of the most effective early therapies for improving motor skills in infants with unilateral motor weakness after perinatal brain injury, is constraint induced movement therapy (CIMT), in which a therapist engages a child in targeted play therapy with the more-affected arm/hand while the less-affected arm is immobilized in a mitt, reinforcing activity-dependent neuroplasticity. taVNS may accelerate functional gains and boost CIMT effects in young infants with hemiplegia over CIMT alone, based on pilot data. Before embarking on a larger scale trial, single pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation (sTMS) will be used to determine the connectivity and strength of the cortical spinal tract motor circuit with motor evoked potential of the hand or thumb.

The hypothesis is that the ability to respond to taVNS paired with intensive motor skill therapy in hemiplegic infants may be predicted by motor evoked potentials (MEP) elicited from sTMS over the motor cortex, as a quantifiable biomarker of CST circuit integrity, circuit response and cortical excitability.