Sister blog of Physicists of the Caribbean in which I babble about non-astronomy stuff, because everyone needs a hobby

Thursday, 1 November 2018

Ending paralysis

Three paralysed men, who were told they would spend the rest of their lives in a wheelchair, are able to walk again thanks to doctors in Switzerland. An electrical device inserted around the men's spines boosted signals from their brains to their legs. And it also helped damaged nerves in the spinal cord to regrow. The researchers hope that this unexpected bonus will enable some paralysed people ultimately to regain independent movement. BBC News has had exclusive access to the patients in the clinical trial, the results of which are published in the journal Nature.

The first patient to be treated was 30-year-old Swiss man David M'zee, who suffered a severe spinal injury seven years ago in a sporting accident.

David's doctor said he would never walk again. However, thanks to an electrical implant developed by a team at École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), he can walk more than half a mile with the implant turned on.

As I strolled with him on a cloudless sunny day in the foothills of the Alps overlooking Lake Geneva, he told me how the ability to walk, albeit for short periods under controlled conditions, had changed his life. "To me it means a lot. I'm surprised at what we have been able to do. I think you've got to try the impossible to make the possible possible. It's a lot of fun - it feels really good," he said.

"I came with my daughter, Charlotte, who was one month old at the time. As we approached David, he looked her in the eye and said, 'I will walk before you'. " When Charlotte took her first step she was 14 months old, by which time David was walking by Lake Geneva. "He said to her, 'I have beaten you'."

To Dr Courtine's surprise, the spinal implant did more than enable David to walk. "What was completely unexpected was the spinal cord repair that we observed. What we observed in animals is that it seems that the nerve fibres are regrowing and reconnecting the brain to the spinal cord," he said.

David had his implant surgically inserted by one of Switzerland's leading neurosurgeons, Dr Jocelyne Bloch, from Lausanne University Hospital. She told me that she was also astonished at David's improvement. David can now walk up to eight paces when his implant is turned off and this is the first time that this has been recorded in a chronic spinal injury.

Out of the lab, in the real world, it is hard for David to walk more than a few paces. The signals from the implant soon become uncomfortable and so can't be used all the time. The system is also expensive and not reliable enough to be used outside of the laboratory for day-to-day use, so it's far from a cure.

https://www.bbc.com/news/health-46043924

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