Personalised spinal cord treatment restores motor function after complete paralysis in three men

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SGENET via pixabay
SGENET via pixabay

Purpose-built personalised electrode paddles designed specifically for spinal cord injuries have been shown to restore independent motor movements within a few hours of the onset of therapy in three patients with complete sensorimotor paralysis, according to international researchers. The team designed new electrode paddles that target all nerves associated with leg and trunk movements in the spinal cord and combined this technology with a personalized computational framework which allowed for the precise positioning of the electrode paddle for each patient. They say that the technology was able to rapidly restore independent walking and other motor activities, such as cycling and swimming, in three patients (all men, between 29 and 41 years of age) with complete sensorimotor paralysis, within a single day.

News release

From: Springer Nature

Neuroscience: Personalized spinal cord treatment rapidly restores motor function after complete paralysis

Personalized spinal cord electrical stimulation — using electrode paddles designed specifically for spinal cord injuries — has been shown to restore independent motor movements within a few hours of the onset of therapy in three patients with complete sensorimotor paralysis. These findings — presented in Nature Medicine — demonstrate that purpose-built stimulation approaches result in superior efficacy and more-diverse motor activities after the most severe spinal cord injury.

Electrical stimulation of the spinal cord is a promising therapeutic option for restoring motor function in people with spinal cord injury. Stimulation approaches so far have provided continuous electrical stimulation of the spinal cord in patients through the use of re-purposed neurotechnologies that were originally designed to treat pain. However, these re-purposed electrical stimulation devices fail to stimulate all the nerves in the spinal cord associated with leg and trunk movements, which may limit the recovery of all motor functions.

Grégoire Courtine, Jocelyne Bloch and colleagues designed a new electrode paddle that targets all nerves associated with leg and trunk movements in the spinal cord. The team combined this technology with a personalized computational framework which allowed for the precise positioning of the electrode paddle for each patient and the personalization of activity-dependent stimulation programs. This optimized spinal cord–stimulation approach was then shown to rapidly restore independent walking and other motor activities, such as cycling and swimming, in three patients (all men, between 29 and 41 years of age) with complete sensorimotor paralysis, within a single day. Neurorehabilitation further helped the patients to be able to conduct these activities within their communities.

These findings — which form part of an ongoing trial — highlight the superior efficacy of purpose-built, personalized spinal cord–stimulation approaches, presenting a therapy that could mediate clinically meaningful improvements in people with a broad range of spinal cord injury severities.

Journal/
conference:
Nature Medicine
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Switzerland
Funder: This work was supported by Wings for Life, the Defitech Foundation, the International Foundation for Research in Paraplegia, Rolex for Enterprise, Carigest Promex, Riders4Riders, ALARME, the Panacée Foundation, the Pictet Group Charitable Foundation, the Firmenich Foundation, ONWARD Medical, European Union’s Horizon 2020 (785907 Human Brain Project SGA2), RESTORE: Eurostars E10889, CONFIRM!: Eurostars E!12743, the Swiss National Science Foundation (NCCR Robotics), the European Research Council (ERC-2015-CoG HOW2WALKAGAIN 682999), the Commission of Technology and Innovation Innosuisse (CTI 41871.1 IP_LS and CTI 25761.1) and the H2020-MSCACOFUND-2015 EPFL fellows program (grant 665667 to F.B.W.).
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