Emuforums.com

Go Back   Emuforums.com > General Discussion > Open Discussion
Home Register Downloads FAQ Members List Calendar Arcade Mark Forums Read

WON'T YOU JOIN US?
You are not a registered member and
are viewing this site as a guest.
Registration is simple and FREE.
Join this CrowdGather community today.
Registration offers the following perks:

» Less advertising throughout
» Post and participate in discussions
» Network with other forum members
» Free private messaging

join

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old June 6th, 2012, 01:41   #1
GeominorAI
@Chamber of Understanding
 
GeominorAI's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: System Server
Posts: 787
Swiss Scientists Rewire Injured Spinal Cords, Paralyzed Rats Walk Again

Quote:
Swiss Scientists Rewire Injured Spinal Cords, Paralyzed Rats Walk Again



Here at GeekTech, we've seen lots of contraptions to help the disabled regain some of their mobility. Now, a group of Swiss scientists from the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) have found a way to rewire the spinal cord of rats after a paralyzing injury.

This rat (pictured above) was just paralyzed a few weeks prior and is now running on a treadmill. The team accomplished this impressive medical feat with an extensive treatment of electro-chemical therapy and training with the help of a robotic harness.

The treatment starts with a round of injections that contain a chemical solution of monoamine agonists to rouse the dormant spinal cord nerves. These chemicals are used to replace the neurotransmitters (dopamine, adrenaline, and serotonin receptors) that normally triggered the brainstem.

Once the chemicals have excited the spinal cord neurons, the scientists start electrically stimulating the spinal cord with implanted electrodes. This is done to retrain the rat’s nervous system to use it lower limbs again--it's much like training “brain control,” but with a physiological component.



The rats were first tested on a moving treadmill where they instinctively walked forward with their front legs and previously paralyzed hind limbs. The scientist eventually moved onto “willpower-based training” involving a non-moving treadmill, a vest harness to force the rats to use only their hind limbs, and a piece of chocolate placed on the other end of the track.

After two weeks, the rats began taking their first voluntary steps on their paralyzed legs. Soon after, the rats were able to walk for extended periods of time, sprint, avoid obstacles, and even climb stairs.

“This is the world-cup of neurorehabilitation,” said Grégoire Courtine, who leads the research, in an EPFL release. “Our rats have become athletes when just weeks before they were completely paralyzed. I am talking about 100% recuperation of voluntary movement.”

These first successful trials with rats look very promising and human trails are in the foreseeable horizon, according to the EPFL. Courtine says that human phase-two trials will begin in a year or two at Balgrist University Hospital Spinal Cord Injury Centre in Zurich, Switzerland. The EPFL researchers are also currently working on a nine-million Euro project with NeuWalk to adapt the spinal neuroprosthetic system they used to treat the rats for human implementation.

[EPFL via Popular Science]
Source: PCWorld
__________________
Computational intelligence must be implemented on a parallel architecture
GeominorAI is offline   Reply With Quote

Advertisement [Remove Advertisement]
Old June 6th, 2012, 01:45   #2
snickothemule
Hello Cudie Pie!
 
snickothemule's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Coffs Harbour, Australia
Posts: 4,877
I'm speechless.
__________________
My grass is the greenest.
snickothemule is offline   Reply With Quote
Old June 6th, 2012, 15:41   #3
SCHUMI_4EVER
Hackin 'n Slashin
 
SCHUMI_4EVER's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Most-expensive-Internet-on-the-Planet Land : South Africa
Posts: 26,427
Makes you wish Christopher Reeve was still around to benefit from this research.
__________________
Intel Core2Quad Q9550 (2.83Ghz stock) | ASUS P5Q | 2x2GB Transcend JetRam DDR2-800 | ASUS ENGTX260\HDTP\896M | Windows Vista Home Premium 64bit SP1
The Champ has retired but may his Legacy live on FOREVER !!!!
Get it right fools! The glass is HALF-EMPTY, not half-full!!!
!!! WARNING: Emulation requires a brain !!! WARNING: Emulation =/= Piracy !!!
SCHUMI_4EVER is online now   Reply With Quote
Old June 7th, 2012, 18:31   #4
Radix865
~sta~are~
 
Radix865's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Finland, now further below the arctic circle.
Posts: 5,631
The exact same thing won't work with humans but it's a huge step to it...
__________________
Radix865 is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump

All times are GMT +1. The time now is 00:38.

© 2006 - 2012 Emu Forums | About Emu Forums | Advertisers | Investors | Legal | A member of the Crowdgather Forum Community


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.