Pirondini, Elvira; Erick Carranza; Josep-Maria Balaguer; Erin Sorensen; Douglas J. Weber; John W. Krakauer; and Marco Capogrosso

Despite advances in understanding of corticospinal motor control and stroke path-ophysiology, current rehabilitation therapies for poststroke upper limb paresis have limited efficacy at the level of impairment. To address this problem, we make the conceptual case for a new treatment approach. We first summarize current understanding of motor control deficits in the arm and hand after stroke and their shared physiological mechanisms with spinal cord injury (SCI). We then review studies of spinal cord stimulation (SCS) for recovery of locomotion after SCI, which provide convincing evidence for enhancement of residual corticospinal function. By extrapolation, we argue for using cervical SCS to restore upper limb motor control after stroke.