Clinical Trial

Timing of Rehabilitation Following Cervical Spinal Surgery in Degenerative Myelopathy

Not Yet Recruiting
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Summary
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn whether starting rehabilitation earlier after surgery can improve recovery and is feasible and acceptable for adults with degenerative cervical myelopathy (DCM) undergoing cervical spine surgery. The main question it aims to answer is: Does starting rehabilitation earlier improve walking, balance, physical activity, quality of life, and nervous system function after surgery? Researchers will compare participants who begin rehabilitation two weeks after surgery with participants who begin rehabilitation six weeks after surgery to see if earlier rehabilitation leads to better recovery outcomes and participation. Participants will: Be randomly assigned to begin rehabilitation either two weeks or six weeks after surgery. Attend physical therapy sessions twice per week for eight weeks focused on strength, balance, and walking. Complete assessments of walking ability, balance, physical activity, quality of life, and nervous system function over several months after surgery. Provide feedback about their experience with the rehabilitation program, including satisfaction and any side effects or challenges related to participation.
Trial Details
NCT Number NCT07636135
Lead Sponsor University of Alberta
Collaborators: Alberta Spine Foundation
Conditions Cervical Myelopathy
Enrollment 20 participants
Start Date 2026-06-15
Primary Completion 2027-10-31 (estimated)
Study Completion 2027-12-31 (estimated)
Updated on ClinicalTrials.gov 2026-06-09