Synativ Research Center · Clinical Programs

Clinical Programs

Structured therapeutic pathways informed by neuroscience and clinical observation

The Synativ platform is developing structured clinical programs designed to explore how neuroscience, sensory physiology, and rehabilitation science may inform therapeutic strategies in real-world settings.

Each program is organized around a specific clinical domain while remaining connected to the broader Synativ framework: nervous system regulation, functional recovery, and translational therapeutic reasoning.

These programs are presented as clinical development pathways. They are not intended as claims of validated treatment efficacy, but as structured areas for therapeutic observation, protocol refinement, and future clinical collaboration.

Three initial areas of clinical focus

Synativ’s first clinical programs are centered on chronic pain, migraine and sensory dysregulation, and neurofunctional rehabilitation. Each one is designed to support structured clinical observation and gradual method development.

Chronic Pain Program

Pain regulation · central sensitization · functional adaptation
Program 01
This program focuses on chronic pain conditions in which nervous system regulation, pain processing, and patient variability may play a significant role. The objective is to explore non-pharmacological therapeutic strategies informed by pain neuroscience and structured clinical observation.

Clinical Focus

  • Chronic pain patterns
  • Central sensitization
  • Persistent musculoskeletal symptoms
  • Pain-related functional limitation

Therapeutic Logic

  • Nervous system regulation
  • Sensory modulation
  • Adaptive therapeutic progression
  • Observation of pain-related responses

Program Objective

  • Structure therapeutic observation
  • Refine patient-centered protocols
  • Support functional recovery pathways
  • Prepare future pilot implementation

Migraine Program

Sensory processing · migraine neurobiology · autonomic regulation
Program 02
This program explores migraine and related sensory dysregulation through a clinical framework informed by sensory physiology, autonomic nervous system regulation, and current migraine neuroscience. The aim is to examine how therapeutic observation may support structured non-invasive intervention strategies.

Clinical Focus

  • Migraine-related symptom patterns
  • Sensory hypersensitivity
  • Autonomic imbalance
  • Functional disruption during episodes

Therapeutic Logic

  • Sensory environment modulation
  • Autonomic regulation strategies
  • Patient response observation
  • Progressive clinical adaptation

Program Objective

  • Develop structured migraine pathways
  • Identify relevant clinical patterns
  • Support therapeutic feasibility analysis
  • Connect research and practice

Neurofunctional Rehabilitation Program

Motor control · recovery support · sensorimotor integration
Program 03
This program is dedicated to neurofunctional rehabilitation contexts in which movement quality, motor control, sensory integration, and gradual recovery support are clinically relevant. It is designed as a framework for observing how structured therapeutic input may contribute to functional adaptation.

Clinical Focus

  • Motor control difficulties
  • Post-neurological functional impairments
  • Sensorimotor disorganization
  • Recovery-related adaptation needs

Therapeutic Logic

  • Sensorimotor stimulation
  • Observation-based progression
  • Functional goal orientation
  • Individualized adaptation

Program Objective

  • Support structured rehabilitation design
  • Explore clinical feasibility
  • Organize functional observation
  • Prepare scalable development pathways
All Synativ clinical programs are presented within a translational and observational framework. They are intended to organize therapeutic reasoning, support structured implementation, and open future opportunities for pilot programs and interdisciplinary collaboration.

Clinical Collaboration & Program Development

For partnerships, pilot initiatives, or structured clinical discussions.

contact@synativcenter.com
Retour en haut