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Our staff has deemed the following public research links as significant and/or new findings by the global research community in the search for a cure for paralysis.  You can search the database by category, keyword, name, and/or date.  Keep abreast of cure research breakthroughs by signing up for our monthly research newsletter. 

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Electrical Device Promising for Spinal Cord Injury

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Early tests are raising hopes that a new device can help people who've injured their spinal cord.
Implantation of an oscillating field stimulator, which generates an electrical field, is a safe, well-tolerated treatment that may improve motor and sensory function in such patients, findings from a pilot study suggest.
 
The device, which was developed at Purdue University, is placed near the site of injury and is designed to stimulate nerves to regenerate and, it's hoped, restore some degree of function.
 
After seeing encouraging results in dogs with spinal cord injury, Dr. Scott Shapiro, from Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, and colleagues tested the device in humans. The researchers' findings appear in the Journal of Neurosurgery-Spine.
 
The early-stage trial involved 10 patients with a complete spinal cord injury but no evidence on an MRI scan that the nerves had been actually severed.
 

posted @ Friday, January 14, 2005 12:00 AM by host

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