Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

State kicks in an extra $2m for thought-control research Spinal team goes out on a limb in walk bid

- KIRSTIN PAYNE kirstin.payne@news.com.au

THE State Government has tipped in an extra $2 million for Griffith University researcher­s to develop technology to help people with spinal cord injuries walk again.

The funding boost, announced yesterday, will assist a team in the university’s BioSpine program in the quest to create a commercial­ly available product in six to eight years.

The BioSpine team will combine technologi­cal aids, thought control, electrical stimulatio­n and drug therapy with the ultimate aim of restoring lower limb function.

For BioSpine research team co-leader Dr Dinesh Palipana, the study is more than an academic pursuit. It is personal.

In 2010, Dr Palipana was involved in a road crash that left him a quadripleg­ic.

“Walking is the ultimate goal,” Dr Palipana said.

“The science is exciting, the technology is exciting, but at the centre of this work are people who are paralysed and urgently need medical change.”

Likened to Marvel’s Tony Stark, Dr Palipana has been piloting some of the technology himself in the Southport laboratory alongside BioSpine co-leader Dr Claudio Pizzolato, a research fellow at Griffith University.

“The technology is in a Model T Ford stage, so the science is getting better and better,” Dr Palipana said.

At present the technology consists of a headset and electronic bike and walking machine, which will be eventually refined by industrial designers for commercial production.

“There is evidence from leading centres around the world that using thought control, electrical simulation and drug therapy in an attempt to restore function in paralysis is showing success,’’ Dr Palipana said.

“We are excited to take this journey and bring these approaches together for the first time.

“Griffith University helped me with the challengin­g task of becoming a doctor with quadripleg­ia. Now we look at changing things for so many

THE SCIENCE IS EXCITING BUT AT THE CENTRE OF THIS WORK ARE PEOPLE WHO ARE PARALYSED

DR DINESH PALIPANA

people living with paralysis. That is not a small goal, but a real one.”

With a team of up to 15 researcher­s and access to an internatio­nal network of more than 90 collaborat­ors, the flagship program will also develop next-generation intelligen­t approaches to training, treatment, surgery planning and rehabilita­tion, addressing neuromuscu­loskeletal (neurologic­al and orthopaedi­c) and vascular (cardio and neuro vascular) conditions.

The Queensland Government funding is provided through the Motor Accident Insurance Commission (MAIC), which regulates the state’s Compulsory Third Party (CTP) insurance scheme.

 ?? Picture: GLENN HAMPSON ?? Dr Claudio Pizzolato fits a thought-control headset on Dr Dinesh Palipana.
Picture: GLENN HAMPSON Dr Claudio Pizzolato fits a thought-control headset on Dr Dinesh Palipana.

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