Recruiting
Intermuscular Coherence as a Biomarker for ALS
The specific aims of this study are to:
1. Determine if a painless and quick measurement of muscle activity using surface electrodes can help with the diagnosis of ALS. Specifically, we ask if a measure of intermuscular coherence (IMC-βγ), when added to current diagnostic criteria (Awaji criteria), can differentiate ALS from mimic diseases more accurately and earlier than currently possible.
2. Characterize IMC-βγ in neurotypical subjects by age, sex, race, and ethnicity.
3. Follow a cohort of ALS patients longitudinally to determine if IMC-βγ changes with ALS disease progression and whether such changes correlate with functional and clinical scores, or survival.