Effects of Whole-body Electrical Muscle Stimulation Exercise on Adults with Neuromuscular Disease

This single-arm pilot study evaluates the effects of whole-body electrical muscle stimulation (WB-EMS) exercise on neuromuscular and physical function in adults with neuromuscular disease (NMD). Due to motor unit impairments, NMD patients often cannot tolerate traditional exercise. WB-EMS bypasses voluntary activation limits by directly stimulating muscle contractions. Up to 50 adults with conditions like ALS, SMA, and MG will undergo 20-minute supervised WB-EMS sessions (1-2 times weekly for 4-8 weeks) using the Katalyst system. Outcomes include neural excitability (TMS), motor unit behavior (EMG, NCS), functional tests (walk, balance, strength), and patient-reported fatigue, pain, and quality of life. Strict safety monitoring and exclusion criteria are in place. This study will provide preliminary data on WB-EMS as a potential exercise modality for NMD.

Study ID: 5708
NCT Number: NCT07478172
Department: Physical Medicine & Rehab
Eligibility: Both men and women 18 years old to 100 years old. Accepts healthy volunteers.

For questions about this study, please contact:

ClinicalTrialsInterest@health.missouri.edu
(573) 882-7026