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Showing posts from October, 2013

Spinal Cord Stimulation and Recovery of Movements, is there any Progress?...

Spinal Stimulation Gets Paralyzed Patients Moving By Emily Waltz Posted 24 Oct 2013 | 15:01 GMT A few months after being discharged from the hospital, in May 2011, Shillcox saw a news report announcing that researchers had for the first time enabled a paralyzed person to stand on his own. Neuroscientist Susan Harkema at the University of Louisville, in Kentucky, used electrical stimulation to “awaken” the man’s lower spinal cord, and on the first day of the experiments he stood up, able to support all of his weight with just some minor assistance to stay balanced. The stimulation also enabled the subject, 23-year-old Rob Summers , to voluntarily move his legs in other ways. Later, he regained some control of his bladder, bowel, and sexual functions, even when the electrodes were turned off. The breakthrough , published in The Lancet , shocked doctors who had previously tried electrically stimulating the spinal nerves of experimental animals and people with spinal-co

DBS and Lab animal studies, recent report on Paralyzed Rats Gait improvement?

Deep Brain Stimulation Improves Paralyzed Rat's Gait By Emily Waltz Posted 23 Oct 2013 | 19:26 GMT Swiss researchers have enabled rats with severe spinal cord injuries to walk and swim by electrically stimulating a group of neurons located deep in the brain. The discovery may give researchers a new approach to treating severe spinal cord injury. The research, led by Lukas Bachmann at the Brain Research Institute at the University of Zurich, was published today in Science Translational Medicine. In most spinal cord injuries, some nerve fibers connecting the brain to the spinal cord below the injury site remain intact, even in severe cases in which a person is paralyzed. Bachmann and his colleagues found that by stimulating a key region of the midbrain called the mesencephalic locomotor region, or MLR, the remaining intact nerve fibers could be recruited to improve walking and swimming movements in spinal-cord injured rats.

Spinal Stem Cell injection to treat Degenerative Disc disease?..

NeoSpine Performs First Spinal Stem Cell Injection Procedure in Washington NeoSpine is at the forefront of medicine by utilizing stem cells with the goal to regenerate and thus repair diseased spinal tissue. http://www.theintelligencer.com/article_f5e96e4d-bc96-57c3-a289-22e4def4e76e.html       St. Louis, MO (PRWEB) October 22, 2013   Two physicians from NeoSpine recently performed an innovative stem cell injection procedure on a patient’s spine to treat back pain caused by degenerative disc disease, the first one in the state of Washington. Dr. Richard Rooney and Dr. Kathy Wang, performed the successful pioneering procedure at Microsurgical Spine Center , the Northwest’s leading ambulatory surgery center located just outside of Seattle, Washington. At the forefront of medicine, stem cells use the body’s own healthy cells with the goal to regenerate to repair diseased spinal tissue. “With stem cell treatment, bone marrow is extracted from the patient’s pelvis bone and is