Clinical trials Below are current clinical trials.4 studies in Spinal Cord Injury Rehabilitation Program (open studies only). Filter this list of studies by location, status and more. A Study to Evaluate Autologous Adipose Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells to Treat Spinal Cord Injury Patients Rochester, Minn. The purpose of the present study is to investigate the safety and efficacy of a single intrathecal injection of autologous, culture expanded AD-MSCs specifically in subjects with severe traumatic SCI when compared to patients undergoing physical therapy. 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. Epidural and Dorsal Root Stimulation in Humans with Spinal Cord Injury Rochester, Minn. A study to compare electrophysiologic activity of epidural stimulation and dorsal root ganglion stimulation, as well as quantify changes in motor performance with both types of stimulation over the course of 10 rehabilitation sessions. 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) Request an appointment DoctorsResearch March 10, 2020 Share on: FacebookTwitter Spinal Cord Injury Rehabilitation ProgramSectionsOverviewTests & proceduresConditions treatedDoctorsClinical trialsResearchCosts & insuranceNews from Mayo ClinicReferrals Research: It's all about patients Show transcript for video Research: It's all about patients [MUSIC PLAYING] Joseph Sirven, M.D., Professor of Neurology, Mayo Clinic: Mayo's mission is about the patient. The patient comes first. So the mission and research here is to advance how we can best help the patient, how to make sure the patient comes first in care. So in many ways, it's a cycle. It can start with as simple as an idea worked on in a laboratory, brought to the patient bedside, and if everything goes right — and let's say it's helpful or beneficial — then brought on as a standard approach. And I think that is one of the unique characteristics of Mayo's approach to research — that patient-centeredness — that really helps to put it in its own spotlight. SectionsRequest an AppointmentOverviewTests & proceduresConditions treatedDoctorsClinical trialsResearchCosts & insuranceNews from Mayo ClinicReferrals ORG-20480637 Medical Departments & Centers Spinal Cord Injury Rehabilitation Program