Skip to main content

Neurophysiology, Clinical Neurophysiology & Neuromonitoring Fundings, Grants?

We are Seeking Funds for Clinical Neurophysiology technology: Do you know a Prospective Resource of funding?
                 Image NINDS:
A friend and colleague and I are working on developing newer technology and application oriented tests that can be utilized in the OR or outside the OR to detect brain damages of various kinds, it is still in the initial stages.
Image:Link
However, such research is an incredibly demanding and time consuming effort, we are looking for Funding. If anyone would be interested to fund such a innovative and modern Neurophysiological techniques whether an individual, philanthropist or entrepreneur, or Research Institute or IONM companies across US and other nations, let me know.
It is going to be an exciting frontier within the brain and spine clinical area, so do let me know by email or post your contacts and background below this ad.

If anyone knows funding sources, please make a comment here below with links or contacts.


Many thanks,
DrMuni

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Benefit of Intraoperative IONM and Expenses?...

The risks are minimal but they are real, and when you are not using the advanced technology and knowledge available to assess and safeguard the patients from risks of nerve damage or paralysis, your care is flawed and pretty dangerous, if you can spent 25 thousands for surgery and do not use Neuromonitoring that might cost another thousand or two, and you think that is cost effective, then something wrong with such ideas. Bringing safety inside OR must be the top priority of an operating surgeon (performing surgeon). There are several vascular or neurological complications happen during spine surgical procedures that may not be identified timely if you do not use neuromonitoring techniques, and when you find out after the surgery, it is too late.   I agree with Professor Fessler, right views when it comes to the benefits and cost effectiveness of IONM. However, totally regard this is yet another Rat and Mice study that is irrelevant to the better care and safe outcome of surgerie

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

Society for Applied Neuroscience 2020